Redox Biology (Jul 2024)

A non-canonical role of ELN protects from cellular senescence by limiting iron-dependent regulation of gene expression

  • Joanna Czarnecka-Herok,
  • Kexin Zhu,
  • Jean-Michel Flaman,
  • Delphine Goehrig,
  • Mathieu Vernier,
  • Gabriela Makulyte,
  • Aline Lamboux,
  • Helena Dragic,
  • Muriel Rhinn,
  • Jean-Jacques Médard,
  • Gilles Faury,
  • Philippe Bertolino,
  • Vincent Balter,
  • Romain Debret,
  • Serge Adnot,
  • Nadine Martin,
  • David Bernard

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 73
p. 103204

Abstract

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The ELN gene encodes tropoelastin which is used to generate elastic fibers that insure proper tissue elasticity. Decreased amounts of elastic fibers and/or accumulation of bioactive products of their cleavage, named elastokines, are thought to contribute to aging. Cellular senescence, characterized by a stable proliferation arrest and by the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP), increases with aging, fostering the onset and progression of age-related diseases and overall aging, and has so far never been linked with elastin. Here, we identified that decrease in ELN either by siRNA in normal human fibroblasts or by knockout in mouse embryonic fibroblasts results in premature senescence. Surprisingly this effect is independent of elastic fiber degradation or elastokines production, but it relies on the rapid increase in HMOX1 after ELN downregulation. Moreover, the induction of HMOX1 depends on p53 and NRF2 transcription factors, and leads to an increase in iron, further mediating ELN downregulation-induced senescence. Screening of iron-dependent DNA and histones demethylases revealed a role for histone PHF8 demethylase in mediating ELN downregulation-induced senescence. Collectively, these results unveil a role for ELN in protecting cells from cellular senescence through a non-canonical mechanism involving a ROS/HMOX1/iron accumulation/PHF8 histone demethylase pathway reprogramming gene expression towards a senescence program.

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