A chimeric peptide promotes immune surveillance of senescent cells in injury, fibrosis, tumorigenesis and aging

Nat Aging. 2024 Dec 2. doi: 10.1038/s43587-024-00750-9. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The accumulation of senescent cells can lead to tissue degeneration, chronic inflammatory disease and age-related tumorigenesis. Interventions such as senolytics are currently limited by off-target toxicity, which could be circumvented by instead enhancing immune-mediated senescent cell clearance; however, immune surveillance of senescent cells is often impeded by immunosuppressive factors in the inflammatory microenvironment. Here, we employ a chimeric peptide as a 'matchmaker' to bind to the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor, a cell surface marker of senescent cells. This peptide modifies the cell surface with polyglutamic acid, promoting immune cell-mediated responses through glutamate recognition. By enhancing the recruitment of immune cells and directly coupling senescent cells and immune cells, we show that this chimeric peptide induces immune clearance of senescent cells and restores tissue homeostasis in conditions such as liver fibrosis, lung injury, cancer and natural aging in mice. This chimeric peptide introduces an immunological conversion strategy that rebalances the senescent immune microenvironment, offering a promising direction for aging immunotherapy.