Strict glucose control and elimination of NLRP3-induced inflammation prevents diabetic bladder dysfunction in the female Akita mouse model.

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Date

2024-11

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Abstract

Purpose

Diabetic bladder dysfunction (DBD) is the most common diabetic complication. Logically, regulation of blood glucose should reverse dysfunction, but the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications study found strict control ineffective. However, it is possible that strict control may prevent DBD if initiated before symptoms appear. We examine the effect of early glucose control on development of DBD in the female diabetic Akita mouse (Type 1) and test the potential of inhibiting/deleting NLRP3 as adjunct therapy to glucose control.

Materials and methods

Female Akita mice were bred NLRP3+/+ or NLRP3-/-. At 6 weeks of age, diabetics received either no glucose control or insulin pellets (s.c., Linshin) designed to poorly or strictly control blood glucose. At Week 15, blood glucose (glucometer), the extravasation potential of bladder (an indirect measurement of inflammation) and bladder function (urodynamics) were assessed.

Results

Blood glucose of diabetics was reduced in poorly controlled and strongly reduced in strictly controlled groups. Levels were not affected by deletion of NLRP3. Evans blue dye extravasation correlated with glucose control and was eliminated in the NLRP3-/- groups. Urodynamics found markers of overactivity in diabetics which was improved in the poorly controlled group and eliminated in the strictly controlled group. In the NLRP3-/- mice, no bladder dysfunction developed, regardless of glucose control.

Conclusions

Early-initiated strict glycemic control and NLRP3 elimination can effectively prevent DBD, suggesting hyperglycemia acts through NLRP3-induced inflammation to trigger DBD.

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Subjects

Animals, Mice, Knockout, Mice, Diabetes Complications, Disease Models, Animal, Inflammation, Blood Glucose, Urodynamics, Female, Urinary Bladder, Urinary Bladder Diseases, NLR Family, Pyrin Domain-Containing 3 Protein, Glycemic Control

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1002/nau.25554

Publication Info

Hughes, Francis M, Shelby N Harper, Huixia Jin, Michael R Odom and J Todd Purves (2024). Strict glucose control and elimination of NLRP3-induced inflammation prevents diabetic bladder dysfunction in the female Akita mouse model. Neurourology and urodynamics, 43(8). pp. 2269–2278. 10.1002/nau.25554 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34240.

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Scholars@Duke

Hughes

Monty Hughes

Assistant Professor in Urology

 Dr. Hughes received his Ph.D. from the Medical University of South Carolina and was a post doc at both the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and NIH. He then joined the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Charlotte where he rose to the rank of Associate Professor (with tenure). Following a brief stint as the director of the biology division of a start-up pharmaceutical company, he joined forces with Dr. Purves at the Medical University of South Carolina to begin this lab focused on benign urinary disorders. Dr. Hughes has been at Duke since 2015. He is currently an Assistant Professor working within the Department of Surgery and Division of Urology. He serves as the Director of the Urinary Dysfunction Laboratory which studies the role of inflammation in disorders such as bladder outlet obstruction and diabetic bladder dysfunction. In association with Dr. J Todd Purves, this lab has been instrumental in demonstrating the central importance of the NLRP3 inflammasome in sensing the biochemical stressors associated with these disorders and translating them into an inflammatory signal. This signal is ultimately responsible for changes in voiding function, denervation and fibrosis.

Odom

Michael R. Odom

Assistant Professor of Urology
Purves

J Todd Purves

Professor of Urology

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