Home
August 2008 September 2008 October 2008
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
Week 36 1 2 3 4 5 6
Week 37 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Week 38 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Week 39 21 22 23 24 25 26 27
Week 40 28 29 30

SUFU 2007 - Using Caveolin-1 Knockout Mouse to Study Impaired Detrusor Contractility and Disrupted Muscarinic Activity in the Aging Bladder Show Comments PDF Print E-mail
  
Thursday, 01 March 2007


H. Henry Lai, Timothy B. Boone, Christopher P. Smith, Timothy C. Thompson, George T. Somogyi

Scott Department of Urology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX

Objective: The caveolin-1 knockout mouse has been proposed as an animal model to study impaired bladder contractility and detrusor overactivity. This study investigates the effects of aging on detrusor contraction in wildtype and caveolin-1 knockout mice.

Methods: Young (3-month-old, 3M) and old (1-year-old, 1Y) male caveolin-1 knockout mice (KO) and their age-matched male wildtype littermates (WT) were used. Longitudinal bladder strips were stimulated electrically (20 Hz) and pharmacologically using 1-10 µM carbachol (a non-subtype selective cholinergic receptor agonist), 10 µM α, β-methylene ATP (a purinergic agonist), and 100 mM potassium (a depolarizing agent). Isometric bladder strip contractions were compared between the young wildtype and knockout groups, and between the old wildtype and knockout groups.

Results: Bladder strips from 1-year-old knockout mice (KO 1Y) exhibited a 40-42% decrease in electrical neural contractions and carbachol-evoked contractions compared with 1-year-old wildtype controls (WT 1Y; p < 0.05). Even though bladder strips from 3-month-old knockout mice (KO 3M) demonstrated a smaller decrease (29-32%) in electrical neural contractions and carbachol-evoked contractions compared with age-matched controls (WT 3M), the trend did not reach statistical significance (p > 0.05). The post-junctional cholinergic pathway was specifically disrupted in caveolin-1 knockout animals since there was no difference in contractility between knockout and wildtype mice (young or old) when the bladders were stimulated by α, β-methylene ATP or potassium. The differences in cholinergic contractility between knockout and wildtype mice became significantly larger as the animals aged from 3-months-old (young bladders) to 1-year-old (aged bladders).

Image

Conclusion: Caveolin-1 knockout mouse provides a much-needed animal model for the study of impaired detrusor contractility in the aging bladder.

Funding: AUA Foundation, National Institutes of Health

UroToday.com Coverage of SUFU 2007

Reader Comments

Please log-in or register in order to submit comments.

Powered by AkoComment!

 
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest


 
< Prev   Next >