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Papers of the Week


Papers: 19 Oct 2019 - 25 Oct 2019


Animal Studies, Pharmacology/Drug Development


2020 Feb


Pain


161


2

Oxaliplatin-induced neuropathy occurs via impairment of haemoglobin proton buffering and is reversed by carbonic anhydrase inhibitors.

Authors

Potenzieri A, Riva B, Rigolio R, Chiorazzi A, Pozzi E, Ballarini E, Cavaletti G, Genazzani AA
Pain. 2020 Feb; 161(2):405-415.
PMID: 31634341.

Abstract

Oxaliplatin is a cornerstone chemotherapeutic used in the treatment of colorectal cancer, the third leading cause of death in Western countries. Most side effects of this platinum-containing drug are adequately managed in the clinic, although acute and long-term neurotoxicity still severely compromises the quality of life of patients treated with oxaliplatin.We have previously demonstrated that therapeutically relevant concentrations/doses of oxaliplatin lead to a reduction in intracellular pH in mouse dorsal root ganglia neurons in vitro and in vivo and that this alteration sensitizes TRPA1 and TRPV1 channels, which most likely mediate the allodynia associated with treatment. In the present manuscript, we show that oxaliplatin leads to a reduction of intracellular pH by forming adducts with neuronal haemoglobin, which acts in this setting as a proton buffer. Furthermore, we show that FDA-approved drugs that inhibit carbonic anhydrase (an enzyme that is linked to haemoglobin in intracellular pH homeostasis), i.e. topiramate and acetazolamide, revert (i) oxaliplatin-induced cytosolic acidification and TRPA1 and TRPV1 modulation in dorsal root ganglia neurons in culture, (ii) oxaliplatin-induced cytosolic acidification of dorsal root ganglia of treated animals, and (iii) oxaliplatin-induced acute cold allodynia in mice while not affecting OHP-induced cytotoxicity on cancer cells.Our data would therefore suggest that reversal of oxaliplatin-induced cytosolic acidification is a viable strategy to minimize acute oxaliplatin-induced symptoms.