Abstract
The urinary bladders of 1-day and 1-week-old rabbits generate higher intravesical pressures in response to bethanechol and field stimulation than bladders isolated from mature 8-week-old rabbits. Yet the density of cholinergic receptors in the rabbit bladder does not change with maturation (1 day to 8 weeks). In an effort to better understand the molecular mechanisms by which newborn rabbit bladders generate greater pressures than the bladders of adult rabbits, we studied the effect of maturation on the relationship between extracellular calcium and contraction. Our results showed quite clearly that (1) at physiologic concentrations of calcium (2.5 mumol/l), isolated bladder strips of 1-day- and 1-week-old rabbits contracted in response to bethanechol to 98% of their maximal tension as opposed to 68% for their 8-week-old counterparts, (2) the ED50 (for calcium) for the 1-day and 1-week bladders was 0.4 mmol/l whereas the ED50 for the adult bladder strips was 2.2 mmol/l, and (3) the neonatal bladders demonstrated a much greater sensitivity to diltiazem than the adult bladders. The contractile response to calcium of the neonatal bladders was significantly inhibited by 1 mumol/l diltiazem whereas the 8-week-old bladders showed no inhibition at this concentration. In a second series of experiments, the effect of extracellular calcium on concentration was correlated with the intracellular concentration of free calcium using the calcium fluoride FURA-2 and surface spectrofluorometry. These studies confirmed that the increased contractile response of the neonatal bladder strips to calcium or cholinergic agonists was associated with an increase in the maximal intracellular free calcium concentration.
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