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Purine nucleoside phosphorylase inhibition ameliorates age-associated lower urinary tract dysfunctions
Lori A. Birder, … , Roger R. Dmochowski, Edwin K. Jackson
Lori A. Birder, … , Roger R. Dmochowski, Edwin K. Jackson
Published September 10, 2020
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2020;5(20):e140109. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.140109.
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Research Article Aging

Purine nucleoside phosphorylase inhibition ameliorates age-associated lower urinary tract dysfunctions

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Abstract

In the aging population, lower urinary tract (LUT) dysfunction is common and often leads to storage and voiding difficulties classified into overlapping symptom syndromes. Despite prevalence and consequences of these syndromes, LUT disorders continue to be undertreated simply because there are few therapeutic options. LUT function and structure were assessed in aged (>25 months) male and female Fischer 344 rats randomized to oral treatment with a purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNPase inhibitor) 8-aminoguanine (8-AG) or vehicle for 6 weeks. The bladders of aged rats exhibited multiple abnormalities: tactile insensitivity, vascular remodeling, reduced collagen-fiber tortuosity, increased bladder stiffness, abnormal smooth muscle morphology, swelling of mitochondria, and increases in urodamaging purine metabolites. Treatment of aged rats with 8-AG restored all evaluated histological, ultrastructural, and physiological abnormalities toward that of a younger state. 8-AG is an effective treatment that ameliorates key age-related structural and physiologic bladder abnormalities. Because PNPase inhibition blocks metabolism of inosine to hypoxanthine and guanosine to guanine, likely uroprotective effects of 8-AG are mediated by increased bladder levels of uroprotective inosine and guanosine and reductions in urodamaging hypoxanthine and xanthine. These findings demonstrate that 8-AG has translational potential for treating age-associated LUT dysfunctions and resultant syndromes in humans.

Authors

Lori A. Birder, Amanda Wolf-Johnston, Alan J. Wein, Fangzhou Cheng, Mara Grove-Sullivan, Anthony J. Kanai, Alan M. Watson, Donna Stoltz, Simon C. Watkins, Anne M. Robertson, Diane Newman, Roger R. Dmochowski, Edwin K. Jackson

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Figure 6

Concurrent multiphoton imaging and biomechanical testing of bladder collagen fibers in lamina propria of young versus aged rat bladder.

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Concurrent multiphoton imaging and biomechanical testing of bladder coll...
(A) The collagen fibers in the lamina propria of young bladder are recruited (straightened) under physiological loading levels (occurred in 3 of 3 rats). (B) In contrast, the aged bladder did not expand sufficiently to recruit collagen fibers, even at physiological loads (occurred in 3 of 3 rats). (C) Collagen fibers in the bladders of aged animals treated with 8-AG were able to be recruited (straightened) at physiological loading levels (occurred in 3 of 3 rats). Aged bladders also exhibit increased wall thickness as compared with younger rat bladders. (D) Bladder wall thickness in old rats was restored toward a younger state with 8-AG treatment (n = young, 4; aged, 4; aged + 8-AG, 4). Data are presented as mean ± SEM. Scale bars: 100 mm. Ordinary 1-way ANOVA was used to evaluate significance. *P < 0.05; **P < 0.01.

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