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8-Aminoguanine protects against paclitaxel-induced neural degeneration and mechanical allodynia
Lori A. Birder, Amanda Wolf-Johnston, Jonathan Franks, Mara L.G. Sullivan, Simon C. Watkins, Anthony J. Kanai, Vladimir B. Ritov, Edwin K. Jackson
Lori A. Birder, Amanda Wolf-Johnston, Jonathan Franks, Mara L.G. Sullivan, Simon C. Watkins, Anthony J. Kanai, Vladimir B. Ritov, Edwin K. Jackson
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Research Article Cell biology Neuroscience Oncology

8-Aminoguanine protects against paclitaxel-induced neural degeneration and mechanical allodynia

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Abstract

Current treatment protocols for most types of cancers require chemotherapeutic agents that are associated with significant side effects, including chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN). Currently, there are no effective CIPN prevention strategies, and current treatment approaches remain limited. The enzyme purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNPase) actively modulates both oxidative injury and cellular damage. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the signs and symptoms of CIPN are due to a chemotherapy-induced dysregulation of the purine metabolome. We assessed the effect of PNPase inhibition on paclitaxel-induced (PAC-induced) CIPN. Female adult Sprague-Dawley rats were treated with PAC and randomized to oral treatment with either the PNPase inhibitor 8-aminoguanine (8-AG) or its vehicle. Some rats were injected with shRNA against PNPase prior to PAC injections. PAC-treated rats exhibited multiple abnormalities: mechanical allodynia and changes in damaging purines, intraepidermal nerve fiber (IENF) density, and signaling cascades involved in mitochondrial disruption and axonal damage. Inhibition of PNPase improved behavioral function (mechanical allodynia), rescued the loss/damage of IENF, and normalized markers for mitochondrial dysfunction and nerve damage. These findings support the hypothesis that inhibition of PNPase prevented (and potentially reversed) CIPN through several mechanisms that included a reduction in neuronal damage and development of mechanical allodynia.

Authors

Lori A. Birder, Amanda Wolf-Johnston, Jonathan Franks, Mara L.G. Sullivan, Simon C. Watkins, Anthony J. Kanai, Vladimir B. Ritov, Edwin K. Jackson

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Figure 4

8-Aminoguanine attenuates PAC-related changes in small-diameter fibers in rat sciatic nerves.

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8-Aminoguanine attenuates PAC-related changes in small-diameter fibers i...
Large area scanning electron microscopy approach was used to scan the entire thin section of the sciatic nerve. (A) Representative image whereby (B) PAC treatment results in a notable decrease in small-diameter fibers (orange), along with increased space between myelinated nerves (cyan), and a delamination of the inner mesaxon inside the myelinated nerve (magenta) relative to control (A). (C) Importantly, 8-aminoguanine (8-AG) treatment restores these deficits to that of a control state. n = 4 per group; Scale bars 4 μm.

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