• Pain · May 2023

    The T type calcium channel CaV3.2 regulates bladder afferent responses to mechanical stimuli.

    • Luke Grundy, Cindy Tay, Stewart Christie, Andrea M Harrington, Joel Castro, Fernanda C Cardoso, Richard J Lewis, Vladimir Zagorodnyuk, and Stuart M Brierley.
    • Visceral Pain Research Group, College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders Health and Medical Research Institute (FHMRI), Flinders University, Bedford Park, Australia.
    • Pain. 2023 May 1; 164 (5): 101210261012-1026.

    AbstractThe bladder wall is innervated by a complex network of afferent nerves that detect bladder stretch during filling. Sensory signals, generated in response to distension, are relayed to the spinal cord and brain to evoke physiological and painful sensations and regulate urine storage and voiding. Hyperexcitability of these sensory pathways is a key component in the development of chronic bladder hypersensitivity disorders including interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome and overactive bladder syndrome. Despite this, the full array of ion channels that regulate bladder afferent responses to mechanical stimuli have yet to be determined. Here, we investigated the role of low-voltage-activated T-type calcium (Ca V 3) channels in regulating bladder afferent responses to distension. Using single-cell reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction and immunofluorescence, we revealed ubiquitous expression of Ca V 3.2, but not Ca V 3.1 or Ca V 3.3, in individual bladder-innervating dorsal root ganglia neurons. Pharmacological inhibition of Ca V 3.2 with TTA-A2 and ABT-639, selective blockers of T-type calcium channels, dose-dependently attenuated ex-vivo bladder afferent responses to distension in the absence of changes to muscle compliance. Further evaluation revealed that Ca V 3.2 blockers significantly inhibited both low- and high-threshold afferents, decreasing peak responses to distension, and delayed activation thresholds, thereby attenuating bladder afferent responses to both physiological and noxious distension. Nocifensive visceromotor responses to noxious bladder distension in vivo were also significantly reduced by inhibition of Ca V 3 with TTA-A2. Together, these data provide evidence of a major role for Ca V 3.2 in regulating bladder afferent responses to bladder distension and nociceptive signalling to the spinal cord.Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the International Association for the Study of Pain.

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