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First published on March 28, 2006; DOI: 10.1124/mol.106.022244


0026-895X/06/7001-23-29$20.00
Mol Pharmacol 70:23-29, 2006

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High Accumulation of Platinum-DNA Adducts in Strial Marginal Cells of the Cochlea Is an Early Event in Cisplatin but Not Carboplatin Ototoxicity

Jan Peter Thomas, Juergen Lautermann, Bernd Liedert, Frank Seiler, and Juergen Thomale

Department of Otorhinolaryngology (J.P.T., J.L.) and Institute of Cell Biology (Cancer Research) (B.L., J.T.), University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany; and Squarix Biotechnology GmbH, Marl, Germany (F.S.)

Ototoxicity is a typical dose-limiting side effect of cancer chemotherapy with cisplatin but much less so with carboplatin. To elucidate the underlying molecular pathological mechanisms, we have measured the formation and persistence of drug-induced DNA adducts in the nuclei of inner ear cells of guinea pigs after short-term exposure to either cisplatin or carboplatin using immunofluorescence staining and quantitative image analysis. After application of carboplatin, all cells of the cochlea exhibited a similar burden of guanine-guanine intrastrand cross-links in DNA. In contrast, we observed a pronounced 3- to 5-fold accumulation of this cytotoxic adduct exclusively in the marginal cells of the stria vascularis between 8 and 48 h after treatment with cisplatin. In the kidney, the other critical target tissue of cisplatin toxicity, a similar high preferential formation of cytotoxic DNA adducts was measured in the tubular epithelial cells but not in other renal cell types. As for the ear, this excessive formation of DNA damage in a particular cell type was seen in animals treated with cisplatin but not those treated with carboplatin. Because cisplatin ototoxicity is often attributed to oxidative stress mediated by the generation of radical oxygen species (ROS), we have measured in parallel the levels of the lead DNA oxidation product 8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) in cochlear cryosections. Compared with basal levels in untreated control cochleas, no additional formation of 8-oxoG was detectable up to 48 h after cisplatin treatment in the DNA of either inner-ear cell type. This suggests that the generation of ROS may be a secondary event in cisplatin ototoxicity.


Received January 6, 2006; accepted March 28, 2006

Address correspondence to: Dr. Juergen Thomale, Institut für Zellbiologie, Universitätsklinikum Essen, Hufelandstr. 55, D-45122 Essen, Germany. E-mail: juergen.thomale{at}uni-essen.de




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J. Neurosci.Home page
A. Dzagnidze, Z. Katsarava, J. Makhalova, B. Liedert, M.-S. Yoon, H. Kaube, V. Limmroth, and J. Thomale
Repair Capacity for Platinum-DNA Adducts Determines the Severity of Cisplatin-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy
J. Neurosci., August 29, 2007; 27(35): 9451 - 9457.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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