Radiation of the urinary bladder attenuates the development of lipopolysaccharide-induced cystitis

•Bladder irradiation inhibited LPS-induced changes in mast cells and Iba1 + cells.•Bladder irradiation potentiated LPS-driven oxidative stress.•Radiation may change the bladder immune response to danger signals. In the present study we assessed how ionizing radiation affects TLR4-stimulated immune a...

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Veröffentlicht in:International immunopharmacology 2020-06, Vol.83, p.106334-106334, Article 106334
Hauptverfasser: Podmolíková, Lucie, Mukanyangezi, Marie Francoise, Dahlqvist, Annika Janina, Naluai, Åsa Torinsson, Ny, Lars, Giglio, Daniel
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Bladder irradiation inhibited LPS-induced changes in mast cells and Iba1 + cells.•Bladder irradiation potentiated LPS-driven oxidative stress.•Radiation may change the bladder immune response to danger signals. In the present study we assessed how ionizing radiation affects TLR4-stimulated immune activation in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced cystitis. LPS or saline was administered intravesically to female rats followed by urinary bladder irradiation (20 Gy) 24 h later or sham treatment. Presence in the urinary bladder of inflammatory cells (mast cells, CD3+, ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule 1 (Iba-1)+, CD68+, CD40+, CD80+, CD11c + and CD206 + cells) and expression of oxidative stress (8-OHdG), hypoxia (HIF1α) and anti-oxidative responses (NRF2, HO-1, SOD1, SOD2, catalase) were assessed 14 days later with western blot, qPCR and/or immunohistochemistry. LPS stimulation resulted in a decrease of Iba-1 + cells in the urothelium, an increase in mast cells in the submucosa and a decrease in the bladder protein expression of HO-1, while no changes in the bladder expression of 8-OHdG, NRF2, SOD1, SOD2, catalase and HIF1α were observed. Bladder irradiation inhibited the LPS-driven increase in mast cells and the decrease in Iba1 + cells. Combining LPS and radiation increased the expression of 8-OHdG and number of CD3-positive cells in the urothelium and led to a decrease in NRF2α gene expression in the urinary bladder. In conclusion, irradiation may attenuate LPS-induced immune responses in the urinary bladder but potentiates LPS-induced oxidative stress, which as a consequence may have an impact on the urinary bladder immune sensing of pathogens and danger signals.
ISSN:1567-5769
1878-1705
1878-1705
DOI:10.1016/j.intimp.2020.106334