Redox Biology (Oct 2024)

Tryptanthrin targets GSTP1 to induce senescence and increases the susceptibility to apoptosis by senolytics in liver cancer cells

  • Yuxuan Zhang,
  • Biying Xiao,
  • Shuying Yuan,
  • Lele Ding,
  • Yongfu Pan,
  • Yanyu Jiang,
  • Shenghao Sun,
  • Xisong Ke,
  • Lili Cai,
  • Lijun Jia

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 76
p. 103323

Abstract

Read online

Targeting senescence has emerged as a promising strategy for liver cancer treatment. However, the lack of a safe agent capable of inducing complete senescence and being combined with senolytics poses a limitation. Here, we screened a natural product library and identified tryptanthrin (TRYP) as a potent inducer of cellular senescence in liver cancer cells both in vitro and in vivo. Mechanistically, Glutathione S-transferase P1 (GSTP1), a key regulator for redox homeostasis, was identified as a target protein for TRYP-induced senescence. TRYP directly bound to GSTP1 and inhibited its enzymatic activity, mediating reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation, followed by DNA damage response (DDR), consequently contributing to initiating primary senescence. Furthermore, TRYP triggered DNA damage-dependent activation of NF-κB pathway, which evoked senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP), thereby leading to senescence reinforcement. Importantly, TRYP exposed the vulnerability of tumor cells and sensitized senescent cells to apoptosis induced by senolytic agent ABT263, a Bcl2 inhibitor. Taken together, our findings reveal that TRYP induces cellular senescence via GSTP1/ROS/DDR/NF-κB/SASP axis, providing a novel potential application in synergizing with senolytic therapy in liver cancer.

Keywords