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J Neurophysiol (October 24, 2007). doi:10.1152/jn.00211.2007
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Submitted on February 27, 2007
Accepted on October 23, 2007

CYCLOPHOSPHAMIDE-INDUCED BLADDER INFLAMMATION SENSITIZES AND ENHANCES P2X RECEPTOR FUNCTION IN RAT BLADDER SENSORY NEURONS

Khoa Dang1, Kenneth R Lamb1, Michael Cohen2, Klaus Bielefeldt3, and Gerald F Gebhart4*

1 Pharmacology, Univ. Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, United States
2 Pathology, Univ. Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, United States
3 Medicine, Gastroenterology Division, Univ. Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
4 Anesthesiol, Neurobiol, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: gebhartgf{at}upmc.edu.

We studied sensitization of retrogradely labeled bladder sensory neurons and plasticity of P2X receptor function in a model of cystitis using patch-clamp techniques. Saline (control) or cyclophosphamide (CYP) was given intraperitoneally to rats on days 0, 2 and 4. On day 5, lumbosacral (LS, L6-S2) or thoracolumbar (TL, T12-L2) dorsal root ganglia were removed and dissociated. Bladders from CYP-treated rats showed partial loss of the urothelium and greater myeloperoxidase activity compared with controls. Bladder neurons from CYP-treated rats were increased in size (based on whole cell capacitance) compared with controls and exhibited lower activation threshold, increased action potential width and greater number of action potentials in response to current injection or application of purinergic agonists. Most control LS bladder neurons (>85%) responded to ATP or {alpha},{beta}-metATP with a slowly desensitizing current; these agonists affected only half of TL neurons, producing predominantly fast/mixed desensitizing currents. CYP treatment increased the fraction of TL bladder neurons sensitive to purinergic agonists (>80%) and significantly increased current density in both LS and TL bladder neurons compared with control. Importantly, LS and TL neurons from CYP-treated rats showed a selective increase in the functional expression of heteromeric P2X2/3 and homomeric P2X3 receptors, respectively. While desensitizing kinetics were slower in LS neurons from CYP-treated compared with control rats, recovery kinetics were similar. The present results demonstrate that bladder inflammation sensitizes and increases P2X receptor expression and/or function for both pelvic and lumbar splanchnic pathways, which contribute, in part, to the hypersensitivity associated with cystitis.




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V. P. Zagorodnyuk, S. J. H. Brookes, N. J. Spencer, and S. Gregory
Mechanotransduction and chemosensitivity of two major classes of bladder afferents with endings in the vicinity to the urothelium
J. Physiol., July 15, 2009; 587(14): 3523 - 3538.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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