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Research Paper|Volume 9, Issue 3|pp 955—963

New agents that target senescent cells: the flavone, fisetin, and the BCL-XL inhibitors, A1331852 and A1155463

Yi Zhu1, Ewald J. Doornebal1,2, Tamar Pirtskhalava1, Nino Giorgadze1, Mark Wentworth3, Heike Fuhrmann-Stroissnigg4, Laura J. Niedernhofer4, Paul D. Robbins4, Tamara Tchkonia1, James L. Kirkland1
  • 1Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA
  • 2Faculty of Science and Engineering, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, Netherlands
  • 3Office of Research Regulatory Support, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA
  • 4Department of Molecular Medicine and the Center on Aging, The Scripps Research Institute, Jupiter, FL 33458, USA

* * Equal contribution

Received: February 22, 2017Accepted: March 7, 2017Published: March 8, 2017

Copyright: © 2017 Zhu et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Abstract

Senescent cells accumulate with aging and at sites of pathology in multiple chronic diseases. Senolytics are drugs that selectively promote apoptosis of senescent cells by temporarily disabling the pro-survival pathways that enable senescent cells to resist the pro-apoptotic, pro-inflammatory factors that they themselves secrete. Reducing senescent cell burden by genetic approaches or by administering senolytics delays or alleviates multiple age- and disease-related adverse phenotypes in preclinical models. Reported senolytics include dasatinib, quercetin, navitoclax (ABT263), and piperlongumine. Here we report that fisetin, a naturally-occurring flavone with low toxicity, and A1331852 and A1155463, selective BCL-XL inhibitors that may have less hematological toxicity than the less specific BCL-2 family inhibitor navitoclax, are senolytic. Fisetin selectively induces apoptosis in senescent but not proliferating human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). It is not senolytic in senescent IMR90 cells, a human lung fibroblast strain, or primary human preadipocytes. A1331852 and A1155463 are senolytic in HUVECs and IMR90 cells, but not preadipocytes. These agents may be better candidates for eventual translation into clinical interventions than some existing senolytics, such as navitoclax, which is associated with hematological toxicity.