In Caenorhabditis elegans, the JNK MAP kinase (MAPK) pathway is important for axon regeneration. The JNK pathway is activated by a signaling cascade consisting of the growth factor SVH-1 and its receptor tyrosine kinase SVH-2. Expression of the
svh-2 gene is induced by axonal injury in a process involving the transcription factors ETS-4 and CEBP-1, related to mammalian Ets and C/EBP, respectively. In this study, we found that
svh-14/mxl-1, a gene encoding a Max-like transcription factor, activates
svh-2 expression in response to axon injury. Furthermore, we identified TDPT-1, a C. elegans homolog of mammalian Tyrosyl-DNA Phosphodiesterase 2 [TDP2; also called Ets1-Associated Protein II (EAPII)] as an MXL-1-binding protein. We further show that deletion of
tdpt-1 suppresses the
mxl-1 defect but not the
ets-4 defect in axon regeneration. TDPT-1 induces SUMOylation of ETS-4, resulting in the inhibition of its transcriptional activity. Thus, TDPT-1 interacts with two different transcription factors and modulates their function in axon regeneration.