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Increasing cell size remodels the proteome and promotes senescence.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Type

Article

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Authors

Lanz, Michael C 
Zatulovskiy, Evgeny  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7847-5829
Swaffer, Matthew P 
Zhang, Lichao 
Ilerten, Ilayda 

Abstract

Cell size is tightly controlled in healthy tissues, but it is unclear how deviations in cell size affect cell physiology. To address this, we measured how the cell's proteome changes with increasing cell size. Size-dependent protein concentration changes are widespread and predicted by subcellular localization, size-dependent mRNA concentrations, and protein turnover. As proliferating cells grow larger, concentration changes typically associated with cellular senescence are increasingly pronounced, suggesting that large size may be a cause rather than just a consequence of cell senescence. Consistent with this hypothesis, larger cells are prone to replicative, DNA-damage-induced, and CDK4/6i-induced senescence. Size-dependent changes to the proteome, including those associated with senescence, are not observed when an increase in cell size is accompanied by an increase in ploidy. Together, our findings show how cell size could impact many aspects of cell physiology by remodeling the proteome and provide a rationale for cell size control and polyploidization.

Description

Keywords

DNA damage, SA-beta-Gal, cell cycle, cell size, p16(INK4), palbociclib, polyploidy, proteomics, senescence, size-scaling, Cell Size, Cellular Senescence, DNA Damage, Proteome

Journal Title

Mol Cell

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1097-2765
1097-4164

Volume Title

82

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Rights

Publisher's own licence
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