Recurrent infections drive persistent bladder dysfunction and pain via sensory nerve sprouting and mast cell activity.
Byron W HayesHae Woong ChoiAbhay P S RathoreChunjing BaoJianling ShiYul HuhMichael W KimQingfeng ChenPradeep BistLai Guan NgChang-Ming ShihJoo Hwan NhoAram KimHana YoonDonghoon LimJohanna L HannanJ Todd PurvesFrancis M HughesRu-Rong JiSoman N AbrahamPublished in: Science immunology (2024)
Urinary tract infections (UTIs) account for almost 25% of infections in women. Many are recurrent (rUTI), with patients frequently experiencing chronic pelvic pain and urinary frequency despite clearance of bacteriuria after antibiotics. To elucidate the basis for these bacteria-independent bladder symptoms, we examined the bladders of patients with rUTI. We noticed a notable increase in neuropeptide content in the lamina propria and indications of enhanced nociceptive activity. In mice subjected to rUTI, we observed sensory nerve sprouting that was associated with nerve growth factor (NGF) produced by recruited monocytes and tissue-resident mast cells. Treatment of rUTI mice with an NGF-neutralizing antibody prevented sprouting and alleviated pelvic sensitivity, whereas instillation of native NGF into naïve mice bladders mimicked nerve sprouting and pain behavior. Nerve activation, pain, and urinary frequency were each linked to the presence of proximal mast cells, because mast cell deficiency or treatment with antagonists against receptors of several direct or indirect mast cell products was each effective therapeutically. Thus, our findings suggest that NGF-driven sensory sprouting in the bladder coupled with chronic mast cell activation represents an underlying mechanism driving bacteria-independent pain and voiding defects experienced by patients with rUTI.
Keyphrases
- growth factor
- chronic pain
- neuropathic pain
- pain management
- spinal cord injury
- urinary tract infection
- peripheral nerve
- end stage renal disease
- high fat diet induced
- chronic kidney disease
- metabolic syndrome
- rectal cancer
- newly diagnosed
- spinal cord
- pregnant women
- insulin resistance
- patient reported outcomes
- ejection fraction
- adipose tissue
- depressive symptoms
- drug induced