Could senescence phenotypes strike the balance to promote tumor dormancy?

Cancer Metastasis Rev. 2023 Mar;42(1):143-160. doi: 10.1007/s10555-023-10089-z. Epub 2023 Feb 3.

Abstract

After treatment and surgery, patient tumors can initially respond followed by a rapid relapse, or respond well and seemingly be cured, but then recur years or decades later. The state of surviving cancer cells during the long, undetected period is termed dormancy. By definition, the dormant tumor cells do not proliferate to create a mass that is detectable or symptomatic, but also never die. An intrinsic state and microenvironment that are inhospitable to the tumor would bias toward cell death and complete eradication, while conditions that favor the tumor would enable growth and relapse. In neither case would clinical dormancy be observed. Normal cells and tumor cells can enter a state of cellular senescence after stress such as that caused by cancer therapy. Senescence is characterized by a stable cell cycle arrest mediated by chromatin modifications that cause gene expression changes and a secretory phenotype involving many cytokines and chemokines. Senescent cell phenotypes have been shown to be both tumor promoting and tumor suppressive. The balance of these opposing forces presents an attractive model to explain tumor dormancy: phenotypes of stable arrest and immune suppression could promote survival, while reversible epigenetic programs combined with cytokines and growth factors that promote angiogenesis, survival, and proliferation could initiate the emergence from dormancy. In this review, we examine the phenotypes that have been characterized in different normal and cancer cells made senescent by various stresses and how these might explain the characteristics of tumor dormancy.

Keywords: Angiogenesis; Breast cancer; Cellular senescence; Chromatin; Immune evasion; Tumor dormancy; p53.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Cellular Senescence
  • Cytokines / therapeutic use
  • Humans
  • Neoplasm Recurrence, Local* / pathology
  • Neoplasms* / metabolism
  • Phenotype
  • Tumor Microenvironment

Substances

  • Cytokines