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Dive into the research topics where Bennett G. Childs is active.

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Featured researches published by Bennett G. Childs.


Nature | 2011

Clearance of p16 Ink4a -positive senescent cells delays ageing-associated disorders

Darren J. Baker; Tobias Wijshake; Tamar Tchkonia; Nathan K. LeBrasseur; Bennett G. Childs; Bart van de Sluis; James L. Kirkland; Jan M. van Deursen

Advanced age is the main risk factor for most chronic diseases and functional deficits in humans, but the fundamental mechanisms that drive ageing remain largely unknown, impeding the development of interventions that might delay or prevent age-related disorders and maximize healthy lifespan. Cellular senescence, which halts the proliferation of damaged or dysfunctional cells, is an important mechanism to constrain the malignant progression of tumour cells. Senescent cells accumulate in various tissues and organs with ageing and have been hypothesized to disrupt tissue structure and function because of the components they secrete. However, whether senescent cells are causally implicated in age-related dysfunction and whether their removal is beneficial has remained unknown. To address these fundamental questions, we made use of a biomarker for senescence, p16Ink4a, to design a novel transgene, INK-ATTAC, for inducible elimination of p16Ink4a-positive senescent cells upon administration of a drug. Here we show that in the BubR1 progeroid mouse background, INK-ATTAC removes p16Ink4a-positive senescent cells upon drug treatment. In tissues—such as adipose tissue, skeletal muscle and eye—in which p16Ink4a contributes to the acquisition of age-related pathologies, life-long removal of p16Ink4a-expressing cells delayed onset of these phenotypes. Furthermore, late-life clearance attenuated progression of already established age-related disorders. These data indicate that cellular senescence is causally implicated in generating age-related phenotypes and that removal of senescent cells can prevent or delay tissue dysfunction and extend healthspan.


Nature | 2016

Naturally occurring p16 Ink4a -positive cells shorten healthy lifespan

Darren J. Baker; Bennett G. Childs; Matej Durik; Melinde E. Wijers; Cynthia J. Sieben; Jian Zhong; Rachel A. Saltness; Karthik B. Jeganathan; Grace Verzosa; Abdulmohammad Pezeshki; Khashayarsha Khazaie; Jordan D. Miller; Jan M. van Deursen

Cellular senescence, a stress-induced irreversible growth arrest often characterized by expression of p16Ink4a (encoded by the Ink4a/Arf locus, also known as Cdkn2a) and a distinctive secretory phenotype, prevents the proliferation of preneoplastic cells and has beneficial roles in tissue remodelling during embryogenesis and wound healing. Senescent cells accumulate in various tissues and organs over time, and have been speculated to have a role in ageing. To explore the physiological relevance and consequences of naturally occurring senescent cells, here we use a previously established transgene, INK-ATTAC, to induce apoptosis in p16Ink4a-expressing cells of wild-type mice by injection of AP20187 twice a week starting at one year of age. We show that compared to vehicle alone, AP20187 treatment extended median lifespan in both male and female mice of two distinct genetic backgrounds. The clearance of p16Ink4a-positive cells delayed tumorigenesis and attenuated age-related deterioration of several organs without apparent side effects, including kidney, heart and fat, where clearance preserved the functionality of glomeruli, cardio-protective KATP channels and adipocytes, respectively. Thus, p16Ink4a-positive cells that accumulate during adulthood negatively influence lifespan and promote age-dependent changes in several organs, and their therapeutic removal may be an attractive approach to extend healthy lifespan.


Nature Medicine | 2015

Cellular senescence in aging and age-related disease: from mechanisms to therapy

Bennett G. Childs; Matej Durik; Darren J. Baker; Jan M. van Deursen

Cellular senescence, a process that imposes permanent proliferative arrest on cells in response to various stressors, has emerged as a potentially important contributor to aging and age-related disease, and it is an attractive target for therapeutic exploitation. A wealth of information about senescence in cultured cells has been acquired over the past half century; however, senescence in living organisms is poorly understood, largely because of technical limitations relating to the identification and characterization of senescent cells in tissues and organs. Furthermore, newly recognized beneficial signaling functions of senescence suggest that indiscriminately targeting senescent cells or modulating their secretome for anti-aging therapy may have negative consequences. Here we discuss current progress and challenges in understanding the stressors that induce senescence in vivo, the cell types that are prone to senesce, and the autocrine and paracrine properties of senescent cells in the contexts of aging and age-related diseases as well as disease therapy.


EMBO Reports | 2014

Senescence and apoptosis: dueling or complementary cell fates?

Bennett G. Childs; Darren J. Baker; James L. Kirkland; Judith Campisi; Jan M. van Deursen

In response to a variety of stresses, mammalian cells undergo a persistent proliferative arrest known as cellular senescence. Many senescence‐inducing stressors are potentially oncogenic, strengthening the notion that senescence evolved alongside apoptosis to suppress tumorigenesis. In contrast to apoptosis, senescent cells are stably viable and have the potential to influence neighboring cells through secreted soluble factors, which are collectively known as the senescence‐associated secretory phenotype (SASP). However, the SASP has been associated with structural and functional tissue and organ deterioration and may even have tumor‐promoting effects, raising the interesting evolutionary question of why apoptosis failed to outcompete senescence as a superior cell fate option. Here, we discuss the advantages that the senescence program may have over apoptosis as a tumor protective mechanism, as well as non‐neoplastic functions that may have contributed to its evolution. We also review emerging evidence for the idea that senescent cells are present transiently early in life and are largely beneficial for development, regeneration and homeostasis, and only in advanced age do senescent cells accumulate to an organisms detriment.


Science | 2016

Senescent intimal foam cells are deleterious at all stages of atherosclerosis

Bennett G. Childs; Darren J. Baker; Tobias Wijshake; Cheryl A. Conover; Judith Campisi; Jan M. van Deursen

Wreaking havoc while (growth-)arrested Cells enter a state of senescence in response to certain stresses. Studying mouse models, Childs et al. examined the role of senescent lipid-loaded macrophages (so-called “foam cells”) in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. At early stages of atherosclerosis, senescent foam cells promoted the expression of inflammatory cytokines. At later stages, they promoted the expression of matrix metalloproteases implicated in the rupture of atherosclerotic plaque, which can lead to blood clots. Experimental removal of the senescent cells had beneficial effects at both stages of the disease. Science, this issue p. 472 Senescent macrophages contribute to early and late stages of atherosclerosis and are potential targets for therapy. Advanced atherosclerotic lesions contain senescent cells, but the role of these cells in atherogenesis remains unclear. Using transgenic and pharmacological approaches to eliminate senescent cells in atherosclerosis-prone low-density lipoprotein receptor–deficient (Ldlr–/–) mice, we show that these cells are detrimental throughout disease pathogenesis. We find that foamy macrophages with senescence markers accumulate in the subendothelial space at the onset of atherosclerosis, where they drive pathology by increasing expression of key atherogenic and inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. In advanced lesions, senescent cells promote features of plaque instability, including elastic fiber degradation and fibrous cap thinning, by heightening metalloprotease production. Together, these results demonstrate that senescent cells are key drivers of atheroma formation and maturation and suggest that selective clearance of these cells by senolytic agents holds promise for the treatment of atherosclerosis.


Nature Reviews Drug Discovery | 2017

Senescent cells: an emerging target for diseases of ageing

Bennett G. Childs; Martina Gluscevic; Darren J. Baker; Remi Martin Laberge; Dan Marquess; Jamie Dananberg; Jan M. van Deursen

Chronological age represents the single greatest risk factor for human disease. One plausible explanation for this correlation is that mechanisms that drive ageing might also promote age-related diseases. Cellular senescence, which is a permanent state of cell cycle arrest induced by cellular stress, has recently emerged as a fundamental ageing mechanism that also contributes to diseases of late life, including cancer, atherosclerosis and osteoarthritis. Therapeutic strategies that safely interfere with the detrimental effects of cellular senescence, such as the selective elimination of senescent cells (SNCs) or the disruption of the SNC secretome, are gaining significant attention, with several programmes now nearing human clinical studies.


Nature Communications | 2014

Spartan deficiency causes genomic instability and progeroid phenotypes

Reeja S. Maskey; Myoung Shin Kim; Darren J. Baker; Bennett G. Childs; Liviu Malureanu; Karthik B. Jeganathan; Yuka Machida; Jan M. van Deursen; Yuichi J. Machida

Spartan (also known as DVC1 and C1orf124) is a PCNA-interacting protein implicated in translesion synthesis, a DNA damage tolerance process that allows the DNA replication machinery to replicate past nucleotide lesions. However, the physiological relevance of Spartan has not been established. Here we report that Spartan insufficiency in mice causes chromosomal instability, cellular senescence and early onset of age-related phenotypes. Whereas complete loss of Spartan causes early embryonic lethality, hypomorphic mice with low amounts of Spartan are viable. These mice are growth retarded and develop cataracts, lordokyphosis and cachexia at a young age. Cre-mediated depletion of Spartan from conditional knockout mouse embryonic fibroblasts results in impaired lesion bypass, incomplete DNA replication, formation of micronuclei and chromatin bridges and eventually cell death. These data demonstrate that Spartan plays a key role in maintaining structural and numerical chromosome integrity and suggest a link between Spartan insufficiency and progeria.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2018

Senescent cells: a therapeutic target for cardiovascular disease

Bennett G. Childs; Hu Li; Jan M. van Deursen

Cellular senescence, a major tumor-suppressive cell fate, has emerged from humble beginnings as an in vitro phenomenon into recognition as a fundamental mechanism of aging. In the process, senescent cells have attracted attention as a therapeutic target for age-related diseases, including cardiovascular disease (CVD), the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the elderly. Given the aging global population and the inadequacy of current medical management, attenuating the health care burden of CVD would be transformative to clinical practice. Here, we review the evidence that cellular senescence drives CVD in a bimodal fashion by both priming the aged cardiovascular system for disease and driving established disease forward. Hence, the growing field of senotherapy (neutralizing senescent cells for therapeutic benefit) is poised to contribute to both prevention and treatment of CVD.


Stem cell reports | 2015

The Role of Stem Cell Genomic Instability in Aging

Cynthia J. Hommerding; Bennett G. Childs; Darren J. Baker

Organismal aging is characterized by a progressive loss of tissue homeostasis and impaired function over time. Multi-cellular organisms activate stem and progenitor cells to replace damaged cells in order to continuously meet the functional demands of tissues. Along with tissue dysfunction, stem cell self-renewal and differentiation capacities diminish with age in concert with the accumulation of genomic damage, suggesting a potential link between genetic instability and aging. Here, we focus on the types of DNA damage found in aged stem cells, and discuss emerging mechanisms by which genomic instability may contribute to stem cell impairments and organismal aging, with particular emphasis on insights obtained from progeroid mouse models. Additionally, we discuss how age-related systemic changes may impact stem cell genomic integrity and function.


Archive | 2017

Treatment of ophthalmic conditions by selectively removing senescent cells from the eye

Remi-Martin Laberge; Judith Campisi; Marco Demaria; Nathaniel David; Alain Philippe Vasserot; James L. Kirkland; Tamar Tchkonia; Yi Zhu; Darren J. Baker; Bennett G. Childs; Jan Van Deursen

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James L. Kirkland

Buck Institute for Research on Aging

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Judith Campisi

Buck Institute for Research on Aging

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Alain Philippe Vasserot

Buck Institute for Research on Aging

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Marco Demaria

Buck Institute for Research on Aging

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Nathaniel David

Buck Institute for Research on Aging

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