Publicaciones científicas
A lncRNA-mediated metabolic rewiring of cell senescence
Elena Grossi 1, Francesco P Marchese 1, Jovanna González 1, Enrique Goñi 1, José Miguel Fernández-Justel 1, Alicia Amadoz 1, Nicolás Herranz 2, Leonor Puchades-Carrasco 3, Marta Montes 4, Maite Huarte 5
Abstract
Despite not proliferating, senescent cells remain metabolically active to maintain the senescence program. However, the mechanisms behind this metabolic reprogramming are not well understood. We identify senescence-induced long noncoding RNA (sin-lncRNA), a previously uncharacterized long noncoding RNA (lncRNA), a key player in this response. While strongly activated in senescence by C/EBPβ, sin-lncRNA loss reinforces the senescence program by altering oxidative phosphorylation and rewiring mitochondrial metabolism. By interacting with dihydrolipoamide S-succinyltransferase (DLST), it facilitates its mitochondrial localization.
Depletion of sin-lncRNA causes DLST nuclear translocation, leading to transcriptional changes in oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) genes. While not expressed in highly proliferative cancer cells, it is strongly induced upon cisplatin-induced senescence.
Depletion of sin-lncRNA in ovarian cancer cells reduces oxygen consumption and increases extracellular acidification, sensitizing cells to cisplatin treatment. Altogether, these results indicate that sin-lncRNA is specifically induced in senescence to maintain metabolic homeostasis, unveiling an RNA-dependent metabolic rewiring specific to senescent cells.
CITA DEL ARTÍCULO Cell Rep. 2025 May 21;44(6):115747. doi: 10.1016/j.celrep.2025.115747. Online ahead of print.

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