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Targeting Cellular Senescence to Enhance Human Endometrial Stromal Cell Decidualization and Inhibit Their Migration

Julia Delenko, Nathaniel Hyman, Prodyot K. Chatterjee, Polona Šafarič Tepeš, Andrew Shih, Xiangying Xue, Jane Gurney, Andrew Baker, Cheng Wei, Daniel Munoz Espin, Ljiljana Fruk, Peter K. Gregersen, Christine N. Metz

Biomolecules · 2025 · ▲ 8 citations

Abstract

Cellular senescence(definition) leads to stable cell cycle arrest and an inflammatory senescence-associated secretory phenotype that varies with stressor and cell type. To mitigate these effects and improve health, senotherapeutics (e.g., senolytics(definition) and senomorphics) have been developed. Senescent-like endometrial stromal cells (eSCs) lining the uterus of patients with endometriosis and infertility are proposed to impair decidualization, a differentiation process required for uterine receptivity in humans. Quercetin, a natural flavonoid senolytic, dramatically improves decidualization and reduces endometriosis in rodent models. However, little is known about the comparative effects of various senotherapeutics on eSCs. Using menstrual effluent-derived eSCs, we evaluated the effects of flavonoid and non-flavonoid compounds on eSC functions associated with endometriosis, aiming to identify optimal senotherapeutics for future clinical trials. Among flavonoids tested, all senolytics (quercetin, fisetin, and luteolin) and kaempferol, a senomorphic, significantly improved decidualization without cytotoxicity. Although non-flavonoids exhibited notable cytotoxicity, dasatinib, but neither ABT-737 nor navitoclax, enhanced decidualization. Flavonoid senotherapeutics and dasatinib significantly inhibited eSC migration. Mechanistic studies revealed that all flavonoids and dasatinib suppressed AKT phosphorylation and upregulated p53 expression. Notably, only quercetin and fisetin reduced ERK1/2 phosphorylation. Furthermore, flavonoid-senolytics and dasatinib consistently eliminated senescent eSCs. These findings support future studies to assess the therapeutic potential of in vivo supplementation with flavonoid senolytics on eSC function using menstrual effluent.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.3390/biom15060873
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2026-06-15 MST

Cite this

APA
Delenko, J., Hyman, N., Chatterjee, P.K., Tepeš, P.�., Shih, A., Xue, X., Gurney, J., Baker, A., Wei, C., Espin, D.M., Fruk, L., Gregersen, P.K., &amp; Metz, C.N. (2025). Targeting Cellular Senescence to Enhance Human Endometrial Stromal Cell Decidualization and Inhibit Their Migration. <em>Biomolecules</em>. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom15060873
Vancouver
Delenko J, Hyman N, Chatterjee PK, Tepeš P�, Shih A, Xue X, et al. Targeting Cellular Senescence to Enhance Human Endometrial Stromal Cell Decidualization and Inhibit Their Migration. Biomolecules. 2025. doi:10.3390/biom15060873.
BibTeX
@article{julia2025Target, title = {Targeting Cellular Senescence to Enhance Human Endometrial Stromal Cell Decidualization and Inhibit Their Migration}, author = {Julia Delenko and Nathaniel Hyman and Prodyot K. Chatterjee and Polona Šafarič Tepeš and Andrew Shih and Xiangying Xue and Jane Gurney and Andrew Baker and Cheng Wei and Daniel Munoz Espin and Ljiljana Fruk and Peter K. Gregersen and Christine N. Metz}, journal = {Biomolecules}, year = {2025}, doi = {10.3390/biom15060873}, }

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