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Tumor stroma-derived TGF-beta limits Myc-driven lymphomagenesis via Suv39h1-dependent senescence

Authors

  • M. Reimann
  • S. Lee
  • C. Loddenkemper
  • J.R. Dörr
  • V. Tabor
  • P. Aichele
  • H. Stein
  • B. Doerken
  • T. Jenuwein
  • C.A. Schmitt

Journal

  • Cancer Cell

Citation

  • Canc Cell 17 (3): 262-272

Abstract

  • Activated RAS/BRAF oncogenes induce cellular senescence as a tumor-suppressive barrier in early cancer development, at least in part, via an oncogene-evoked DNA damage response (DDR). In contrast, Myc activation-although producing a DDR as well-is known to primarily elicit an apoptotic countermeasure. Using the Emu-myc transgenic mouse lymphoma model, we show here in vivo that apoptotic lymphoma cells activate macrophages to secrete transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) as a critical non-cell-autonomous inducer of cellular senescence. Accordingly, neutralization of TGF-beta action, like genetic inactivation of the senescence-related histone methyltransferase Suv39h1, significantly accelerates Myc-driven tumor development via cancellation of cellular senescence. These findings, recapitulated in human aggressive B cell lymphomas, demonstrate that tumor-prompted stroma-derived signals may limit tumorigenesis by feedback senescence induction.


DOI

doi:10.1016/j.ccr.2009.12.043