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TRPV4 receptor as a functional sensory molecule in bladder urothelium: Stretch‐independent, tissue‐specific actions and pathological implications

The newly recognized sensory role of bladder urothelium has generated intense interest in identifying its novel sensory molecules. Sensory receptor TRPV4 may serve such function. However, specific and physiologically relevant tissue actions of TRPV4, stretch‐independent responses, and underlying mec...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Roberts, Max W. G., Sui, Guiping, Wu, Rui, Rong, Weifang, Wildman, Scott, Montgomery, Bruce, Ali, Ahmed, Langley, Steve, Ruggieri, Michael R., Wu, Changhao
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6973053/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31914645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.201900961RR
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author Roberts, Max W. G.
Sui, Guiping
Wu, Rui
Rong, Weifang
Wildman, Scott
Montgomery, Bruce
Ali, Ahmed
Langley, Steve
Ruggieri, Michael R.
Wu, Changhao
author_facet Roberts, Max W. G.
Sui, Guiping
Wu, Rui
Rong, Weifang
Wildman, Scott
Montgomery, Bruce
Ali, Ahmed
Langley, Steve
Ruggieri, Michael R.
Wu, Changhao
author_sort Roberts, Max W. G.
collection PubMed
description The newly recognized sensory role of bladder urothelium has generated intense interest in identifying its novel sensory molecules. Sensory receptor TRPV4 may serve such function. However, specific and physiologically relevant tissue actions of TRPV4, stretch‐independent responses, and underlying mechanisms are unknown and its role in human conditions has not been examined. Here we showed TRPV4 expression in guinea‐pig urothelium, suburothelium, and bladder smooth muscle, with urothelial predominance. Selective TRPV4 activation without stretch evoked significant ATP release—key urothelial sensory process, from live mucosa tissue, full‐thickness bladder but not smooth muscle, and sustained muscle contractions. ATP release was mediated by Ca(2+)‐dependent, pannexin/connexin‐conductive pathway involving protein tyrosine kinase, but independent from vesicular transport and chloride channels. TRPV4 activation generated greater Ca(2+) rise than purinergic activation in urothelial cells. There was intrinsic TRPV4 activity without exogeneous stimulus, causing ATP release. TRPV4 contributed to 50% stretch‐induced ATP release. TRPV4 activation also triggered superoxide release. TRPV4 expression was increased with aging. Human bladder mucosa presented similarities to guinea pigs. Overactive bladders exhibited greater TRPV4‐induced ATP release with age dependence. These data provide the first evidence in humans for the key functional role of TRPV4 in urothelium with specific mechanisms and identify TRPV4 up‐regulation in aging and overactive bladders.
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spelling pubmed-69730532020-01-27 TRPV4 receptor as a functional sensory molecule in bladder urothelium: Stretch‐independent, tissue‐specific actions and pathological implications Roberts, Max W. G. Sui, Guiping Wu, Rui Rong, Weifang Wildman, Scott Montgomery, Bruce Ali, Ahmed Langley, Steve Ruggieri, Michael R. Wu, Changhao FASEB J Research Articles The newly recognized sensory role of bladder urothelium has generated intense interest in identifying its novel sensory molecules. Sensory receptor TRPV4 may serve such function. However, specific and physiologically relevant tissue actions of TRPV4, stretch‐independent responses, and underlying mechanisms are unknown and its role in human conditions has not been examined. Here we showed TRPV4 expression in guinea‐pig urothelium, suburothelium, and bladder smooth muscle, with urothelial predominance. Selective TRPV4 activation without stretch evoked significant ATP release—key urothelial sensory process, from live mucosa tissue, full‐thickness bladder but not smooth muscle, and sustained muscle contractions. ATP release was mediated by Ca(2+)‐dependent, pannexin/connexin‐conductive pathway involving protein tyrosine kinase, but independent from vesicular transport and chloride channels. TRPV4 activation generated greater Ca(2+) rise than purinergic activation in urothelial cells. There was intrinsic TRPV4 activity without exogeneous stimulus, causing ATP release. TRPV4 contributed to 50% stretch‐induced ATP release. TRPV4 activation also triggered superoxide release. TRPV4 expression was increased with aging. Human bladder mucosa presented similarities to guinea pigs. Overactive bladders exhibited greater TRPV4‐induced ATP release with age dependence. These data provide the first evidence in humans for the key functional role of TRPV4 in urothelium with specific mechanisms and identify TRPV4 up‐regulation in aging and overactive bladders. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-11-21 2020-01 /pmc/articles/PMC6973053/ /pubmed/31914645 http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.201900961RR Text en © 2019 The Authors. The FASEB Journal published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Roberts, Max W. G.
Sui, Guiping
Wu, Rui
Rong, Weifang
Wildman, Scott
Montgomery, Bruce
Ali, Ahmed
Langley, Steve
Ruggieri, Michael R.
Wu, Changhao
TRPV4 receptor as a functional sensory molecule in bladder urothelium: Stretch‐independent, tissue‐specific actions and pathological implications
title TRPV4 receptor as a functional sensory molecule in bladder urothelium: Stretch‐independent, tissue‐specific actions and pathological implications
title_full TRPV4 receptor as a functional sensory molecule in bladder urothelium: Stretch‐independent, tissue‐specific actions and pathological implications
title_fullStr TRPV4 receptor as a functional sensory molecule in bladder urothelium: Stretch‐independent, tissue‐specific actions and pathological implications
title_full_unstemmed TRPV4 receptor as a functional sensory molecule in bladder urothelium: Stretch‐independent, tissue‐specific actions and pathological implications
title_short TRPV4 receptor as a functional sensory molecule in bladder urothelium: Stretch‐independent, tissue‐specific actions and pathological implications
title_sort trpv4 receptor as a functional sensory molecule in bladder urothelium: stretch‐independent, tissue‐specific actions and pathological implications
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6973053/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31914645
http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.201900961RR
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