Acute radiation impacts contractility of guinea-pig bladder strips affecting mucosal-detrusor interactions.

Radiation-induced bladder toxicity is associated with radiation therapy for pelvic malignancies, arising from unavoidable irradiation of neighbouring normal bladder tissue. This study aimed to investigate the acute impact of ionizing radiation on the contractility of bladder strips and identify the...

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Main Authors: Bronagh M McDonnell, Paul J Buchanan, Kevin M Prise, Karen D McCloskey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5841802?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-7475b03f28d54e9794d01d86744d95a22020-11-25T01:31:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01133e019392310.1371/journal.pone.0193923Acute radiation impacts contractility of guinea-pig bladder strips affecting mucosal-detrusor interactions.Bronagh M McDonnellPaul J BuchananKevin M PriseKaren D McCloskeyRadiation-induced bladder toxicity is associated with radiation therapy for pelvic malignancies, arising from unavoidable irradiation of neighbouring normal bladder tissue. This study aimed to investigate the acute impact of ionizing radiation on the contractility of bladder strips and identify the radiation-sensitivity of the mucosa vs the detrusor. Guinea-pig bladder strips (intact or mucosa-free) received ex vivo sham or 20Gy irradiation and were studied with in vitro myography, electrical field stimulation and Ca2+-fluorescence imaging. Frequency-dependent, neurogenic contractions in intact strips were reduced by irradiation across the force-frequency graph. The radiation-difference persisted in atropine (1μM); subsequent addition of PPADs (100μM) blocked the radiation effect at higher stimulation frequencies and decreased the force-frequency plot. Conversely, neurogenic contractions in mucosa-free strips were radiation-insensitive. Radiation did not affect agonist-evoked contractions (1μM carbachol, 5mM ATP) in intact or mucosa-free strips. Interestingly, agonist-evoked contractions were larger in irradiated mucosa-free strips vs irradiated intact strips suggesting that radiation may have unmasked an inhibitory mucosal element. Spontaneous activity was larger in control intact vs mucosa-free preparations; this difference was absent in irradiated strips. Spontaneous Ca2+-transients in smooth muscle cells within tissue preparations were reduced by radiation. Radiation affected neurogenic and agonist-evoked bladder contractions and also reduced Ca2+-signalling events in smooth muscle cells when the mucosal layer was present. Radiation eliminated a positive modulatory effect on spontaneous activity by the mucosa layer. Overall, the findings suggest that radiation impairs contractility via mucosal regulatory mechanisms independent of the development of radiation cystitis.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5841802?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bronagh M McDonnell
Paul J Buchanan
Kevin M Prise
Karen D McCloskey
spellingShingle Bronagh M McDonnell
Paul J Buchanan
Kevin M Prise
Karen D McCloskey
Acute radiation impacts contractility of guinea-pig bladder strips affecting mucosal-detrusor interactions.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Bronagh M McDonnell
Paul J Buchanan
Kevin M Prise
Karen D McCloskey
author_sort Bronagh M McDonnell
title Acute radiation impacts contractility of guinea-pig bladder strips affecting mucosal-detrusor interactions.
title_short Acute radiation impacts contractility of guinea-pig bladder strips affecting mucosal-detrusor interactions.
title_full Acute radiation impacts contractility of guinea-pig bladder strips affecting mucosal-detrusor interactions.
title_fullStr Acute radiation impacts contractility of guinea-pig bladder strips affecting mucosal-detrusor interactions.
title_full_unstemmed Acute radiation impacts contractility of guinea-pig bladder strips affecting mucosal-detrusor interactions.
title_sort acute radiation impacts contractility of guinea-pig bladder strips affecting mucosal-detrusor interactions.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Radiation-induced bladder toxicity is associated with radiation therapy for pelvic malignancies, arising from unavoidable irradiation of neighbouring normal bladder tissue. This study aimed to investigate the acute impact of ionizing radiation on the contractility of bladder strips and identify the radiation-sensitivity of the mucosa vs the detrusor. Guinea-pig bladder strips (intact or mucosa-free) received ex vivo sham or 20Gy irradiation and were studied with in vitro myography, electrical field stimulation and Ca2+-fluorescence imaging. Frequency-dependent, neurogenic contractions in intact strips were reduced by irradiation across the force-frequency graph. The radiation-difference persisted in atropine (1μM); subsequent addition of PPADs (100μM) blocked the radiation effect at higher stimulation frequencies and decreased the force-frequency plot. Conversely, neurogenic contractions in mucosa-free strips were radiation-insensitive. Radiation did not affect agonist-evoked contractions (1μM carbachol, 5mM ATP) in intact or mucosa-free strips. Interestingly, agonist-evoked contractions were larger in irradiated mucosa-free strips vs irradiated intact strips suggesting that radiation may have unmasked an inhibitory mucosal element. Spontaneous activity was larger in control intact vs mucosa-free preparations; this difference was absent in irradiated strips. Spontaneous Ca2+-transients in smooth muscle cells within tissue preparations were reduced by radiation. Radiation affected neurogenic and agonist-evoked bladder contractions and also reduced Ca2+-signalling events in smooth muscle cells when the mucosal layer was present. Radiation eliminated a positive modulatory effect on spontaneous activity by the mucosa layer. Overall, the findings suggest that radiation impairs contractility via mucosal regulatory mechanisms independent of the development of radiation cystitis.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5841802?pdf=render
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