Fluorescence-based detection and quantification of features of cellular senescence.

Author: Cho S, Hwang ES.
Affiliation:
Department of Life Science, University of Seoul, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
Conference/Journal: Methods Cell Biol.
Date published: 2011
Other: Volume ID: 103 , Pages: 149-88 , Word Count: 228


Cellular senescence is a spontaneous organismal defense mechanism against tumor progression which is raised upon the activation of oncoproteins or other cellular environmental stresses that must be circumvented for tumorigenesis to occur. It involves growth-arrest state of normal cells after a number of active divisions. There are multiple experimental routes that can drive cells into a state of senescence. Normal somatic cells and cancer cells enter a state of senescence upon overexpression of oncogenic Ras or Raf protein or by imposing certain kinds of stress such as cellular tumor suppressor function. Both flow cytometry and confocal imaging analysis techniques are very useful in quantitative analysis of cellular senescence phenomenon. They allow quantitative estimates of multiple different phenotypes expressed in multiple cell populations simultaneously. Here we review the various types of fluorescence methodologies including confocal imaging and flow cytometry that are frequently utilized to study a variety of senescence. First, we discuss key cell biological changes occurring during senescence and review the current understanding on the mechanisms of these changes with the goal of improving existing protocols and further developing new ones. Next, we list specific senescence phenotypes associated with each cellular trait along with the principles of their assay methods and the significance of the assay outcomes. We conclude by selecting appropriate references that demonstrate a typical example of each method.

Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

PMID: 21722803

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