| Literature DB >> 35793989 |
Mathijs M de Rijk1,2, Amanda Wolf-Johnston3, Aura F Kullmann3, Stephanie Taiclet3, Anthony J Kanai3,4, Sruti Shiva4, Lori A Birder3,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Lower urinary tract symptoms are known to significantly increase with age, negatively impacting quality of life and self-reliance. The urothelium fulfills crucial tasks, serving as a barrier protecting the underlying bladder tissue from the harsh chemical composition of urine, and exhibits signaling properties via the release of mediators within the bladder wall that affect bladder functioning. Aging is associated with detrimental changes in cellular health, in part by increasing oxidative stress in the bladder mucosa, and more specifically the urothelium. This, in turn, may impact urothelial mitochondrial health and bioenergetics.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Lower urinary tract symptoms; Mitochondria; Oxidative stress; Urothelium
Year: 2022 PMID: 35793989 PMCID: PMC9260322 DOI: 10.5213/inj.2142224.112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Neurourol J ISSN: 2093-4777 Impact factor: 3.038
Fig. 1.Bar graphs depicting age-associated changes in levels of p21-Arc (P=0.003) (A), nitrotyrosine (P=0.006) (B), cytochrome C (P=0.04) (C), and baseline ROS (P≤0.001) (D). N: numbers, indicating numbers of young versus aged rats per group, are shown in the respective bar graph. ROS, reactive oxygen species.
Fig. 2.(A) Bar graphs depicting the TMRM intensity in cultured UTCs from young and aged rat bladders (N=4 each). Ψm was found to differ significantly (P=0.01) between age groups. (B, C) Representative images of TMRM staining in cultured UTCs from young and aged animals. TMRM, tetramethylrhodamine methyl ester; UTC, urothelial cell.
Fig. 3.UTCs from aged rats showed altered mitochondria bioenergetics. (A) Representative Seahorse trace measuring oxygen consumption in UTCs from young (open circles) and aged (squares) rats. Trace shows basal respiration, the addition of DMEM as a vehicle control, oligomycin (2.5μM), FCCP (0.7μM), and rotenone (10μM) (as described in the Methods section). (B) Quantitation of data from 2 individual experiments (N=4 rats/group) measuring basal respiration (P=0.001), maximal respiratory rate (P=0.013), and spare respiratory capacity (P=0.017). (C) Hypotonicity-evoked adenosine triphosphate release was significantly lower in UTCs from aged versus young rat bladders by 80%; N=3 each, P=0.006. UTC, urothelial cell; OCR, oxygen consumption rate; DMEM, Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle Medium; FCCP, carbonyl cyanide-4-(trifluoromethoxy) phenylhydrazone.