Litcius/Paper detail

The Regulation of Cellular Senescence in Cancer

Xianhong Zhang, Yue Gao, Siyu Zhang, Yixiong Wang, Yitian Du, Shuailin Hao, Ting Ni

2025Biomolecules14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cellular senescence is a stable state of cell cycle arrest caused by telomere shortening or various stresses. After senescence, cells cease dividing and exhibit many age-related characteristics. Unlike the halted proliferation of senescence cells, cancer cells are considered to have unlimited growth potential. When cells display senescence-related features, such as telomere loss or stem cell failure, they can inhibit tumor development. Therefore, inducing cells to enter a senescence state can serve as a barrier to tumor cell development. However, many recent studies have found that sustained senescence of tumor cells or normal cells under certain circumstances can exert environment-dependent effects of tumor promotion and inhibition by producing various cytokines. In this review, we first introduce the causes and characteristics of induced cellular senescence, analyze the senescence process of immune cells and cancer cells, and then discuss the dual regulatory role of cell senescence on tumor growth and senescence-induced therapies targeting cancer cells. Finally, we discuss the role of senescence in tumor progression and treatment opportunities, and propose further studies on cellular senescence and cancer therapy.

Topics & Concepts

SenescenceTelomereCell biologyBiologyCancerCancer cellCellCell cycleCancer researchCell growthCellular senescenceGeneticsPhenotypeGeneTelomeres, Telomerase, and SenescenceImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesNanoplatforms for cancer theranostics
The Regulation of Cellular Senescence in Cancer | Litcius