Intravesical Administration of Xenogeneic Porcine Urothelial Cells Attenuates Cyclophosphamide-Induced Cystitis in Mice.

Cell Transplant

1 Departments of Medical Laboratory Science and Biotechnology and Urology, Sex Hormone Research Center, China Medical University and Hospital, Taichung.

Published: March 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The urothelium, which lines the bladder and other urinary structures, relies on stem cells for maintenance and has potential for cell therapy to fix damage caused by various stresses, leading to conditions like cystitis.
  • This study explores using porcine urothelial cells (PUCs) as a treatment for cystitis by introducing them directly into the bladder, showing that they can shield the urothelium from harmful chemical damage and reduce inflammation in a mouse model.
  • Although PUC treatment was effective in maintaining the integrity of the bladder lining, it did trigger some immune responses, indicating a balance between potential benefits and the body’s reaction to foreign cells.

Article Abstract

The urothelium of the bladder, renal pelvis, ureter and urethra is maintained through the regulated proliferation and differentiation of urothelial stem and progenitor cells. These cells provide a rich source of a novel urothelial cell therapy approach that could be used to protect, regenerate, repair and restore a damaged urothelium. Urothelial injury caused by physical, chemical and microbial stress is the pathological basis of cystitis (bladder inflammation). The loss of urothelial integrity triggers a series of inflammatory events, resulting in pain and hematuria such as hemorrhage cystitis and interstitial cystitis. Here we investigate a novel cell therapy strategy to treat cystitis by protecting the urothelium from detrimental stresses through intravesically instilling porcine urothelial cells (PUCs) into the bladder. Using a chemical-induced urothelial injury mouse model of cyclophosphamide (CPP)-induced hemorrhagic cystitis, we determined how the intravesical instillation of PUCs could protect the urothelium from toxic attack from CPP metabolites. We show that intravesical PUC instillation protected the bladder from toxic chemical attack in mice receiving CPP with reduced inflammation and edema. Compared with the vehicle control mice, the proliferative response to chemical injury and apoptotic cells within the bladder tissues were reduced by intravesical PUC treatment. Furthermore, the urothelium integrity was maintained in the intravesical PUC-treated group. After xenogeneic PUCs were introduced and adhered to the mouse urothelium, immunological rejection responses were observed with increased neutrophil infiltration in the lamina propria and higher immune-related gene expression. Our findings provide an innovative and promising intravesical PUC cell therapy for cystitis with urothelial injury by protecting the urothelium from noxious agents.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6425110PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0963689718822773DOI Listing

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