Overactive Bladder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Mediators of Neurogenic Inflammation in the Urinary Tract as Key Factors in the Painful Bladder Syndrome / Interstitial Cystitis and Bladder Dysfunction
Interstitial cystitis (IC)/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) is a clinical syndrome of pelvic pain and/or urinary urgency/frequency in absence of a specific cause such as bacterial infection or damage to the bladder. The pathogenetic mechanisms of IC/CPPS are as yet undefined and it is largely this lack of knowledge, which precludes a systematic therapeutic approach. Experimental evidence, including results from the animal models of cystitis and the knock-out mice, indicate a participation of tachykinin receptors, especially the NK1R, in neurogenic inflammation, which is considered an important element of the IC complex. However, there is very scant information about the molecular mechanisms of IC in humans, or of the types of receptors, which participate in neurogenic inflammation. Based on our molecular biological know-how and the clinical expertise, we propose to investigate the role of the tachykinin and bradykinin receptors and their signalling partners in CPPS and bladder dysfunction in humans.
Although IC has been recognised for more than a century, its pathophysiology remains a
mystery, and as a consequence the treatment of IC is largely empirical. A multitude of
mechanisms of the disease have been postulated ranging from neuroinflammatory to autoimmune
or possibly infectious or toxic agents. Newer studies have hinted towards a genetic basis of
the disease, but in most hypotheses an inflammatory component of some kind is involved and
many findings support this theory. An often-cited hypothesis is the leaky epithelium. The
healthy bladder is coated with a thin mucinous substance bladder surface mucin, which is
composed of numerous sulfonated glycosaminoglycans and glycoproteins. In IC patients, in
contrast to controls, as well as in some animal models of IC, qualitative changes to this
surface layer have been observed (Lilly et al, 1990., Moskowitz et al, 1994). An initiating
event (toxin) may lead to functional changes and increased permeability. This in turn leads
to nerve sensitisation and possibly up-regulation. There is increasing evidence that the
progression of IC is accompanied by a significant up-regulation of sensory nerves in the
bladder (Letourneau, 1996). Nerve growth factor (NGF), a neurotropin that sensitises
nociceptor fibres, was reported to be increased in bladders of IC patients (Lowe, 1997), and
application of NGF in Wistar rats acutely induced bladder hyperactivity (Chuang, 2001).
Sensory nerves in neurogenic inflammation secrete inflammatory mediators such as Substance P
(SP), a nociceptive neurotransmitter in the central and peripheral nervous system. Increased
amounts of the released Substance P have been found in the urine of IC patients
(Hohenfellner, et al,1992, Pang et al., 1995, Pang et al., 1996), the concentration of
Substance P reflecting the patients' degree of pain (Chen et al., 1999). Substance P and
related tachykinins (TKs) mediate a variety of physiological processes in the genitourinary,
pulmonary and gastrointestinal tract through stimulation of NK1 and NK2 receptors.
Pre-clinical evidence obtained through use of selective tachykinin receptor antagonists
indicates that endogenous tachykinins are involved in regulation of smooth muscle
contraction, vasodilation, water metabolism and inflammation. Recently it was shown that
mRNA encoding for SP receptor NK1 is in-creased in the bladder biopsies from patients with
interstitial cystitis (Marchand et al., 1998). NK1R mRNA was found in detrusor muscle,
urothelium and vascular structures, and the endothelial NK1R were markedly increased. SP
binding to NK1R on endothelial cells results in vasodilation, plasma extravasation, cytokine
release and activation and infiltration of immune cells, all characteristic of IC.
Experiments with the NK1R knockout mice allowed for the first time to demonstrate the
obligatory requirement of NK1R in cystitis and participation of these receptors in the chain
of events linking mast cell degranulation and inflammation (Saban et al., 2000).
Changes in the sarcolemma, and altered expression of the tachykinin and bradykinin receptors
might significantly influence the downstream signalling events leading to propagation of the
symptoms of chronic pelvic pain/IC. By uncovering the link between clinical symptoms and the
molecular regulation of the atypical inflammatory response, we may be able to offer novel
and specific options for treatment. In the current proposal, we would like to further our
studies of urinary bladder pathology, in particular the symptomatic complex of
PBS/interstitial cystitis, and investigate the effect of changes in human urothelium and
detrusor muscle cells on the NK1R-mediated signalling.
Biopsies from controls and PBS patients will be obtained in either general or spinal
anesthesia transurethrally from the bladder dome and trigone with a biopsy tong. RNA will be
extracted, and the expression levels of selected genes analyzed using Taqman real-time PCR
and gene expression arrays (Applied Biosystems). Calcium imaging will be used to monitor the
receptor activation and protein levels analysed by SDS-PAGE and Western Blotting. Receptor
tissue distribution will be analysed by immuno-cytochemistry.
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Observational Model: Case Control, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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