Ozturk, N.Erdal, E.Mumcuoglu, M.Akcali, K. C.Yalcin, O.Senturk, S.Arslan-Ergul, A.Gur, B.Yulug, I.Cetin Atalay, R.Yakicier, C.Yagci, T.Tez, M.Ozturk, M.2016-02-082016-02-0820060027-8424http://hdl.handle.net/11693/23851Tumor cells have the capacity to proliferate indefinitely that is qualified as replicative immortality. This ability contrasts with the intrinsic control of the number of cell divisions in human somatic tissues by a mechanism called replicative senescence. Replicative immortality is acquired by inactivation of p53 and p16INK4a genes and reactivation of hTERT gene expression. It is unknown whether the cancer cell replicative immortality is reversible. Here, we show the spontaneous induction of replicative senescence in p53-and p16 INK4a-deficient hepatocellular carcinoma cells. This phenomenon is characterized with hTERT repression, telomere shortening, senescence arrest, and tumor suppression. SIP1 gene (ZFHX1B) is partly responsible for replicative senescence, because short hairpin RNA-mediated SIP1 inactivation released hTERT repression and rescued clonal hepatocellular carcinoma cells from senescence arrest. © 2006 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA.EnglishImmortalityLiver cancerp53SIP1TelomeraseProtein p16INK4aRNAReprogramming of replicative senescence in hepatocellular carcinoma-derived cellsArticle10.1073/pnas.0510877103