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Publication : Loss of β1-integrin from urothelium results in overactive bladder and incontinence in mice: a mechanosensory rather than structural phenotype.

First Author  Kanasaki K Year  2013
Journal  FASEB J Volume  27
Issue  5 Pages  1950-61
PubMed ID  23395910 Mgi Jnum  J:197843
Mgi Id  MGI:5494782 Doi  10.1096/fj.12-223404
Citation  Kanasaki K, et al. (2013) Loss of beta1-integrin from urothelium results in overactive bladder and incontinence in mice: a mechanosensory rather than structural phenotype. FASEB J 27(5):1950-61
abstractText  Bladder urothelium senses and communicates information about bladder fullness. However, the mechanoreceptors that respond to tissue stretch are poorly defined. Integrins are mechanotransducers in other tissues. Therefore, we eliminated beta1-integrin selectively in urothelium of mice using Cre-LoxP targeted gene deletion. beta1-Integrin localized to basal/intermediate urothelial cells by confocal microscopy. beta1-Integrin conditional-knockout (beta1-cKO) mice lacking urothelial beta1-integrin exhibited down-regulation and mislocalization of alpha3- and alpha5-integrins by immunohistochemistry but, surprisingly, had normal morphology, permeability, and transepithelial resistance when compared with Cre-negative littermate controls. beta1-cKO mice were incontinent, as judged by random urine leakage on filter paper (4-fold higher spotting, P<0.01; 2.5-fold higher urine area percentage, P<0.05). Urodynamic function assessed by cystometry revealed bladder overfilling with 80% longer intercontractile intervals (P<0.05) and detrusor hyperactivity (3-fold more prevoid contractions, P<0.05), but smooth muscle contractility remained intact. ATP secretion into the lumen was elevated (49 vs. 22 nM, P<0.05), indicating abnormal filling-induced purinergic signaling, and short-circuit currents (measured in Ussing chambers) revealed 2-fold higher stretch-activated ion channel conductances in response to hydrostatic pressure of 1 cmH2O (P<0.05). We conclude that loss of integrin signaling from urothelium results in incontinence and overactive bladder due to abnormal mechanotransduction; more broadly, our findings indicate that urothelium itself directly modulates voiding.
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