- Hishida, Tomoaki;
- Vazquez-Ferrer, Eric;
- Hishida-Nozaki, Yuriko;
- Takemoto, Yuto;
- Hatanaka, Fumiyuki;
- Yoshida, Kei;
- Prieto, Javier;
- Sahu, Sanjeeb Kumar;
- Takahashi, Yuta;
- Reddy, Pradeep;
- O’Keefe, David D;
- Esteban, Concepcion Rodriguez;
- Knoepfler, Paul S;
- Delicado, Estrella Nuñez;
- Castells, Antoni;
- Campistol, Josep M;
- Kato, Ryuji;
- Nakagawa, Hiroshi;
- Belmonte, Juan Carlos Izpisua
It is widely believed that cellular senescence plays a critical role in both aging and cancer, and that senescence is a fundamental, permanent growth arrest that somatic cells cannot avoid. Here we show that Myc plays an important role in self-renewal of esophageal epithelial cells, contributing to their resistance to cellular senescence. Myc is homogeneously expressed in basal cells of the esophageal epithelium and Myc positively regulates their self-renewal by maintaining their undifferentiated state. Indeed, Myc knockout induced a loss of the undifferentiated state of esophageal epithelial cells resulting in cellular senescence while forced MYC expression promoted oncogenic cell proliferation. A superoxide scavenger counteracted Myc knockout-induced senescence, therefore suggesting that a mitochondrial superoxide takes part in inducing senescence. Taken together, these analyses reveal extremely low levels of cellular senescence and senescence-associated phenotypes in the esophageal epithelium, as well as a critical role for Myc in self-renewal of basal cells in this organ. This provides new avenues for studying and understanding the links between stemness and resistance to cellular senescence.