Sarm1 activation produces cADPR to increase intra-axonal Ca++ and promote axon degeneration in PIPN

Yihang Li, Harvard Medical School
Maria F. Pazyra-Murphy, Harvard Medical School
Daina Avizonis, McGill University
Mariana de Sá Tavares Russo, McGill University
Sophia Tang, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Chiung-Ya Chen, Academia Sinica
Yi-Ping Hsueh, Academia Sinica
Johann S. Bergholz, Harvard Medical School
Tao Jiang, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
Jean J. Zhao, Harvard Medical School
Jian Zhu, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
Kwang Woo Ko, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
Jeffrey Milbrandt, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
Aaron DiAntonio, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
Rosalind A. Segal, Harvard Medical School

Abstract

Cancer patients frequently develop chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN), a painful and long-lasting disorder with profound somatosensory deficits. There are no effective therapies to prevent or treat this disorder. Pathologically, CIPN is characterized by a "dying-back" axonopathy that begins at intra-epidermal nerve terminals of sensory neurons and progresses in a retrograde fashion. Calcium dysregulation constitutes a critical event in CIPN, but it is not known how chemotherapies such as paclitaxel alter intra-axonal calcium and cause degeneration. Here, we demonstrate that paclitaxel triggers Sarm1-dependent cADPR production in distal axons, promoting intra-axonal calcium flux from both intracellular and extracellular calcium stores. Genetic or pharmacologic antagonists of cADPR signaling prevent paclitaxel-induced axon degeneration and allodynia symptoms, without mitigating the anti-neoplastic efficacy of paclitaxel. Our data demonstrate that cADPR is a calcium-modulating factor that promotes paclitaxel-induced axon degeneration and suggest that targeting cADPR signaling provides a potential therapeutic approach for treating paclitaxel-induced peripheral neuropathy (PIPN).