Abstract

Cystectomy is the removal of all or part of the urinary bladder. It has been observed that there is significant regrowth of the bladder after partial cystectomy and this has been proposed to be through regeneration of the organ. Regrowth of tissue in mammals has been proposed to involve compensatory mechanisms that share many characteristics of true regeneration, like the growth of specialized structures such as blood vessels or nerves. However, the overall structure of the normal organ is not achieved. Here we tested if bladder growth after subtotal cystectomy (STC, removal of 50% of the bladder) was compensatory or regenerative. To do this we subjected adult female mouse bladders to STC and assessed regrowth using several established cellular parameters including histological, gene expression, cytokine accumulation and cell proliferation studies. Bladder function was analyzed using cystometry and the voiding stain on paper (VSOP) technique. We found that STC bladders were able to increase their ability to hold urine with the majority of volume restoration occurring within the first two weeks. Regenerating bladders had thinner walls with less mean muscle thickness, and they showed increased collagen deposition at the incision as well as throughout the bladder wall suggesting that fibrosis was occurring. Cell populations differed in their response to injury with urothelial regeneration complete by day 7, but stromal and detrusor muscle still incomplete after 8wks. Cells incorporated EdU when administered at the time of surgery and tracing of EdU positive cells over time indicated that many newborn cells originate at the incision and move mediolaterally. Basal urothelial cells and bladder mesenchymal stem cells but not smooth muscle cells significantly incorporated EdU after STC. Since anti-inflammatory cytokines play a role in regeneration, we analyzed expressed cytokines and found that no anti-inflammatory cytokines were present in the bladder 1wk after STC. Our findings suggest that bladder regrowth after cystectomy is compensatory and functions to increase the volume that the bladder can hold. This finding sets the stage for understanding how the bladder responds to cystectomy and how this can be improved in patients after suffering bladder injury.

Highlights

  • Tissue regeneration is a process by which an injured or amputated anatomic structure regrows to form a normally functioning appendage or organ

  • Since individual lobes of the liver do not regrow after hepatectomy, liver regeneration is considered to be compensatory growth, rather than a process that restores the original form of the organ [4]

  • Since the bladder is accessed in the abdomen and its function can be assessed after surgery, the bladder is an excellent model for studying and manipulating mammalian regeneration in adult mice

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Summary

Introduction

Tissue regeneration is a process by which an injured or amputated anatomic structure regrows to form a normally functioning appendage or organ This process has been observed in animals for hundreds of years and is understood to occur in some but not all organisms [1]. While some organisms such as echinoderms, crustaceans, amphibians and fish have the ability to completely regenerate tissues such as limbs, fins and heart, mammals demonstrate limited regeneration typically accompanied by scar formation [2, 3]. Multiple cell-types regrow in the liver after hepatectomy including blood vessels and nerves, so at the cellular level, regeneration is occurring [11]

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