Abstract

Agonists such as icilin and menthol can activate the cool temperature-sensitive ion channel TRPM8. However, biological responses to menthol may occur independently of TRPM8 activation. In the rodent urinary bladder, menthol facilitates the micturition reflex but inhibits muscarinic contractions of the detrusor smooth muscle. The site(s) of TRPM8 expression in the bladder are controversial. In this study we investigated the regulation of bladder contractility in vitro by menthol. Bladder strips from wild type and TRPM8 knockout male mice (25–30 g) were dissected free and mounted in organ baths. Isometric contractions to carbachol (1 nM–30 µM), CaCl2 (1 µM to 100 mM) and electrical field stimulation (EFS; 8, 16, 32 Hz) were measured. Strips from both groups contracted similarly in response to both carbachol and EFS. Menthol (300 µM) or nifedipine (1 µM) inhibited carbachol and EFS-induced contractions in both wild type and TRPM8 knockout bladder strips. Incubation with the sodium channel blocker tetrodotoxin (1 µM), replacement of extracellular sodium with the impermeant cation N-Methyl-D-Glucamine, incubation with a cocktail of potassium channel inhibitors (100 nM charybdotoxin, 1 µM apamin, 10 µM glibenclamide and 1 µM tetraethylammonium) or removal of the urothelium did not affect the inhibitory actions of menthol. Contraction to CaCl2 was markedly inhibited by either menthol or nifedipine. In cultured bladder smooth muscle cells, menthol or nifedipine abrogated the carbachol or KCl-induced increases in [Ca2+]i. Intravesical administration of menthol increased voiding frequency while decreasing peak voiding pressure. We conclude that menthol inhibits muscarinic bladder contractions through blockade of L-type calcium channels, independently of TRPM8 activation.

Highlights

  • Overactive bladder (OAB) affects millions of people worldwide

  • electrical field stimulation (EFS)-induced contractions are inhibited by menthol in both wild type and TRP Melastatin-8 (TRPM8) knockout bladder strips

  • EFS (8–32 Hz) elicited bladder contractions in bladder strips, and these contractions were unaffected by preincubation for 15 minutes with 30 mM menthol

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Summary

Introduction

First-line pharmacological interventions are efficacious [1], their unpleasant side effects have stimulated the search for novel targets to modulate bladder contractions. Many recent studies have investigated the effects of agonists and antagonists of the Transient Receptor Potential (TRP) family of ion channels on bladder function. Instillation of the TRP Melastatin-8 (TRPM8) agonist menthol into the bladder is suggested to activate bladder sensory afferents [2], whilst inhibiting muscarinic contractions of the detrusor smooth muscle (DSM) [3]. The dependence of these menthol effects on TRPM8 activation has only been investigated through the use of receptor antagonists [4], with no previous studies examining menthol effects in the bladders of TRPM8 knockout mice. The pharmacology of menthol is complex, and it can interact with multiple targets independently of TRPM8 [9,10,11]

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