Spinal cord transection (SCT) leads to an increase in spontaneous contractile activity in the isolated bladder that is reminiscent of an overactive bladder syndrome in patients with similar damage to the central nervous system. An increase in interstitial cell number in the suburothelial space between the urothelium and detrusor smooth muscle layer occurs in SCT bladders, and these cells elicit excitatory responses to purines and pyrimidines such as ATP, ADP, and UTP. We have investigated the hypothesis that these agents underlie the increase in spontaneous activity. Rats underwent lower thoracic spinal cord transection, and their bladder sheets or strips, with intact mucosa except where specified, were used for experiments. Isometric tension was recorded and propagating Ca(2+) and membrane potential (E(m)) waves were recorded by fluorescence imaging using photodiode arrays. SCT bladders were associated with regular spontaneous contractions (2.9 ± 0.4/min); ADP, UTP, and UDP augmented the amplitude but not their frequency. With strips from such bladders, a P2Y(6)-selective agonist (PSB0474) exerted similar effects. Fluorescence imaging of bladder sheets showed that ADP or UTP increased the conduction velocity of Ca(2+)/E(m) waves that were confined to regions of the bladder wall with an intact mucosa. When transverse bladder sections were used, Ca(2+)/E(m) waves originated in the suburothelial space and propagated to the detrusor and urothelium. Analysis of wave propagation showed that the suburothelial space exhibited properties of an electrical syncitium. These experiments are consistent with the hypothesis that P2Y-receptor agonists increase spontaneous contractile activity by augmenting functional activity of the cellular syncitium in the suburothelial space.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.00436.2011 | DOI Listing |
Toxins (Basel)
March 2020
Department of Urology, Hualien Tzu Chi Hospital, Buddhist Tzu Chi Medical Foundation, Hualien 970, Taiwan.
Bladder oversensitivity arises from several different conditions involving the bladder, bladder outlet, systemic or central nervous system diseases. Increase of the bladder sensation results from activation of the sensory receptors in the urothelial cells or suburothelial tissues. Medical treatment targeting the overactive bladder (OAB) or interstitial cystitis (IC) might relieve oversensitive bladder symptoms (frequency, urgency and pain) in a portion of patients, but a certain percentage of patients still need active management.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurourol Urodyn
November 2019
Division of Biosciences, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
To describe and illustrate the structure of the propria, the bladder of adult rats was fixed in controlled conditions of distension and examined by light and electron microscopy. The lamina propria, ~50 µm thick in the distended bladder, consists of a superficial part (the cellular component), adjacent to the urothelium, rich in nerves, capillaries, fibroblasts and thin bundles of collagen, and a deep, thicker part (the fibrous component), adjacent to the detrusor, rich in large collagen fibres and with few fibroblasts. In the cellular part there is an extensive plexus of afferent nerve fibers and a dense capillary network (with numerous pericytes), lying close to the urothelium, that is unique to the bladder.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Exp Med Biol
August 2019
Department of Cell Physiology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Nagoya City University, Nagoya, Japan.
The peristaltic pressure waves in the renal pelvis that propel urine expressed by the kidney into the ureter towards the bladder have long been considered to be 'myogenic', being little affected by blockers of nerve conduction or autonomic neurotransmission, but sustained by the intrinsic release of prostaglandins and sensory neurotransmitters. In uni-papilla mammals, the funnel-shaped renal pelvis consists of a lumen-forming urothelium and a stromal layer enveloped by a plexus of 'typical' smooth muscle cells (TSMCs), in multi-papillae kidneys a number of minor and major calyces fuse into a large renal pelvis. Electron microscopic, electrophysiological and Ca imaging studies have established that the pacemaker cells driving pyeloureteric peristalsis are likely to be morphologically distinct 'atypical' smooth muscle cells (ASMCs) that fire Ca transients and spontaneous transient depolarizations (STDs) which trigger propagating nifedipine-sensitive action potentials and Ca waves in the TSMC layer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPflugers Arch
June 2017
Department of Pharmacology, School of Biomedical Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, 3800, Australia.
Typical and atypical smooth muscle cells (TSMCs and ASMCs, respectively) and interstitial cells (ICs) within the pacemaker region of the mouse renal pelvis were examined using focused ion beam scanning electron (FIB SEM) tomography, immunohistochemistry and Ca imaging. Individual cells within 500-900 electron micrograph stacks were volume rendered and associations with their neighbours established. 'Ribbon-shaped', Ano1 Cl channel immuno-reactive ICs were present in the adventitia and the sub-urothelial space adjacent to the TSMC layer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbdom Imaging
October 2015
Department of Radiology, The Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Objective: The purpose of this article is to present a contemporary review of the imaging appearance of diseases which affect the deeper layers of the urinary bladder, including both suburothelial and extrinsic pathologies, using radiologic-pathologic correlation.
Conclusion: Compared to the more common urothelial lesions, at cystoscopy, suburothelial and extrinsic diseases of the urinary bladder wall often have a non-specific appearance or may be occult. Cross-sectional imaging, in particular MRI, plays an integral role in diagnosis.
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