Abstract

The anticancer drug cisplatin (CisPt) injures post-mitotic neuronal cells, leading to neuropathy. Furthermore, CisPt triggers cell death in replicating cells. Here, we aim to unravel the relevance of different types of CisPt-induced DNA lesions for evoking neurotoxicity. To this end, we comparatively analyzed wild-type and loss of function mutants of C. elegans lacking key players of specific DNA repair pathways. Deficiency in ercc-1, which is essential for nucleotide excision repair (NER) and interstrand crosslink (ICL) repair, revealed the most pronounced enhancement in CisPt-induced neurotoxicity with respect to the functionality of post-mitotic chemosensory AWA neurons, without inducing neuronal cell death. Potentiation of CisPt-triggered neurotoxicity in ercc-1 mutants was accompanied by complex alterations in both basal and CisPt-stimulated mRNA expression of genes involved in the regulation of neurotransmission, including cat-4, tph-1, mod-1, glr-1, unc-30 and eat-18. Moreover, xpf-1, csb-1, csb-1;xpc-1 and msh-6 mutants were significantly more sensitive to CisPt-induced neurotoxicity than the wild-type, whereas xpc-1, msh-2, brc-1 and dog-1 mutants did not distinguish from the wild-type. The majority of DNA repair mutants also revealed increased basal germline apoptosis, which was analyzed for control. Yet, only xpc-1, xpc-1;csb-1 and dog-1 mutants showed elevated apoptosis in the germline following CisPt treatment. To conclude, we provide evidence that neurotoxicity, including sensory neurotoxicity, is triggered by CisPt-induced DNA intra- and interstrand crosslinks that are subject of repair by NER and ICL repair. We hypothesize that especially ERCC1/XPF, CSB and MSH6-related DNA repair protects from chemotherapy-induced neuropathy in the context of CisPt-based anticancer therapy.

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