Literature DB >> 9458841

Disruption of guinea pig urinary bladder permeability barrier in noninfectious cystitis.

J P Lavelle1, G Apodaca, S A Meyers, W G Ruiz, M L Zeidel.   

Abstract

Although most cell membranes permit rapid flux of water, small nonelectrolytes, and ammonia, the apical membranes of bladder epithelial umbrella cells, which form the bladder permeability barrier, exhibit strikingly low permeabilities to these substances. In cystitis, disruption of the bladder permeability barrier may irritate the bladder wall layers underlying the epithelium, causing or exacerbating inflammation, and increasing urinary frequency, urgency, and bladder pain. To determine the effects of inflammation on the integrity of the permeability barrier, guinea pigs were sensitized with ovalbumin, and the bladders were exposed subsequently to antigen by instillation on the urinary side. Inflammation of the bladder wall markedly reduced transepithelial resistance of dissected epithelium mounted in Ussing chambers and increased water and urea permeabilities modestly at 2 h and more strikingly at 24 h after induction of the inflammation. Transmission and scanning electron microscopy of bladders at 30 min and 24 h after antigen exposure revealed disruption of tight junctions, denuding of patches of epithelium, and occasional loss of apical membrane architecture. These permeability and structural effects did not occur in nonsensitized animals in which the bladders were exposed to antigen and in sensitized animals exposed to saline vehicle rather than antigen. These results demonstrate that inflammation of the underlying muscle and lamina propria can disrupt the bladder permeability barrier by damaging tight junctions and apical membranes and causing sloughing of epithelial cells. Leakage of urinary constituents through the damaged epithelium may then exacerbate the inflammation in the underlying muscle layers.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9458841     DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.1998.274.1.F205

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  19 in total

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5.  Water permeability of capillaries in the subfornical organ of rats determined by Gd-DTPA(2-) enhanced 1H magnetic resonance imaging.

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7.  Local burn injury impairs epithelial permeability and antimicrobial peptide barrier function in distal unburned skin.

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8.  System level changes in gene expression in maturing bladder mucosa.

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9.  Gene expression profiling of mouse bladder inflammatory responses to LPS, substance P, and antigen-stimulation.

Authors:  Marcia R Saban; Ngoc-Bich Nguyen; Timothy G Hammond; Ricardo Saban
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 4.307

10.  Meprin A metalloproteases enhance renal damage and bladder inflammation after LPS challenge.

Authors:  Renee E Yura; S Gaylen Bradley; Ganesan Ramesh; W Brian Reeves; Judith S Bond
Journal:  Am J Physiol Renal Physiol       Date:  2008-10-29
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