Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Urol. 2012 Jun 8;12:17. doi: 10.1186/1471-2490-12-17.
Interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome (IC/PBS) is a chronic bladder disorder with bladder epithelial thinning or ulceration, pain, urinary frequency and urgency. There is no reliably effective therapy for IC/PBS, and no generally accepted animal model for the disorder in which potential therapies can be tested. Bladder epithelial cells from IC/PBS patients make a small glycopeptide antiproliferative factor or "APF" that inhibits proliferation, decreases tight junction protein expression, increases paracellular permeability, and induces changes in gene expression of bladder epithelial cells in vitro that mimic abnormalities in IC/PBS patient biopsy specimens in vivo. We therefore determined the ability of a synthetic APF derivative to inhibit bladder epithelial repair in mice.
The bladder epithelium of female CBA/J mice was stripped by transurethral infusion of 3% acetic acid, and mice were subsequently treated daily with one of three intravesical treatments [synthetic as-APF, inactive unglycosylated control peptide, or phosphate buffered saline carrier (PBS)] for 1-21 days. Fixed bladder sections were either stained with haematoxylin and eosin for determination of epithelial area by image analysis, or incubated with anti-uroplakin III (UPIII) or anti-zonula occludens type 1 (ZO-1) antibodies for immunofluorescence microscopy. Epithelial measurement data were analyzed by a two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA); post hoc comparisons of multiple groups were carried out using the Tukey-Kramer method.
Bladder epithelial repair was significantly attenuated in as-APF-treated mice as compared to control mice on days 3-21 (p < 0.05); the mean epithelial/total area over all measured days was also significantly lower in as-APF-treated mice vs. mice in either control group by post hoc analysis (p < 0.0001 for both comparisons). UPIII and ZO-1 expression was also decreased in as-APF-treated mice as compared to mice in either control group by day 7 (UPIII) or day 14 (ZO-1).
This model demonstrates in vivo effects of as-APF which abrogates bladder epithelial repair and expression of UPIII and ZO-1 in CBA/J mice following transurethral acetic acid infusion. As bladder epithelial thinning, decreased UPIII expression, and decreased ZO-1 expression are histopathologic features of IC/PBS patient biopsies, this model may be useful for studying the pathophysiology of IC/PBS and the effect of potential therapies.
间质性膀胱炎/膀胱疼痛综合征(IC/PBS)是一种慢性膀胱疾病,伴有膀胱上皮变薄或溃疡、疼痛、尿频和尿急。目前尚无可靠有效的治疗方法,也没有普遍接受的用于测试潜在治疗方法的疾病动物模型。来自 IC/PBS 患者的膀胱上皮细胞会产生一种小的糖肽增殖抑制因子或“APF”,它可以抑制增殖、降低紧密连接蛋白的表达、增加细胞旁通透性,并诱导体外膀胱上皮细胞的基因表达发生变化,这些变化类似于体内 IC/PBS 患者活检标本的异常。因此,我们确定了一种合成的 APF 衍生物抑制小鼠膀胱上皮修复的能力。
通过经尿道注入 3%乙酸使雌性 CBA/J 小鼠的膀胱上皮脱落后,随后每日用三种膀胱内治疗方法之一[合成的 as-APF、无活性的未糖基化对照肽或磷酸盐缓冲盐水载体(PBS)]进行治疗,持续 1-21 天。固定的膀胱切片用苏木精和伊红染色,通过图像分析测定上皮面积,或用抗 uroplakin III(UPIII)或抗封闭蛋白 1(ZO-1)抗体进行免疫荧光显微镜检测。通过双向方差分析(ANOVA)分析上皮测量数据;采用 Tukey-Kramer 方法对多个组进行事后比较。
与对照组相比,as-APF 治疗组的膀胱上皮修复在第 3-21 天明显受到抑制(p < 0.05);通过事后分析,as-APF 治疗组与任一对照组相比,所有测量天数的上皮/总面积也明显更低(p < 0.0001,两者比较)。与对照组相比,as-APF 治疗组的 UPIII 和 ZO-1 表达在第 7 天(UPIII)或第 14 天(ZO-1)也降低。
该模型在经尿道乙酸灌注后的 CBA/J 小鼠中证明了 as-APF 的体内作用,该作用阻止了膀胱上皮修复和 UPIII 和 ZO-1 的表达。由于膀胱上皮变薄、UPIII 表达减少和 ZO-1 表达减少是 IC/PBS 患者活检的组织病理学特征,因此该模型可能有助于研究 IC/PBS 的病理生理学和潜在治疗方法的效果。