4.7 Article

The Bladder Is a Novel Target of Developmental Polychlorinated Biphenyl Exposure Linked to Increased Inflammatory Cells in the Bladder of Young Mice

Journal

TOXICS
Volume 9, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxics9090214

Keywords

lower urinary tract; bladder; inflammation; POPs; developmental basis of adult disease

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health NIEHS [R00 ES029537, T32 ES007015]
  2. Iowa Superfund Research Program at The University of Iowa [ES014901, ES011269, P42 ES013661]
  3. United States Environmental Protection Agency [R833292]
  4. Wisconsin O'Brien Center for Benign Urologic Research [U54 DK104310]

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Research suggests that developmental exposure to PCBs may lead to changes in immune cells in the bladder of mice, particularly an increase in macrophages in female bladders. Additionally, decreased collagen density and increased cell division were observed in the bladder, indicating potential inflammatory events.
Bladder inflammation is associated with several lower urinary tract symptoms that greatly reduce quality of life, yet contributing factors are not completely understood. Environmental chemicals are plausible mediators of inflammatory reactions within the bladder. Here, we examine whether developmental exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) leads to changes in immune cells within the bladder of young mice. Female mice were exposed to an environmentally relevant mixture of PCBs through gestation and lactation, and bladders were collected from offspring at postnatal day (P) 28-31. We identify several dose- and sex-dependent PCB effects in the bladder. The lowest concentration of PCB (0.1 mg/kg/d) increased CD45+ hematolymphoid immune cells in both sexes. While PCBs had no effect on CD79b+ B cells or CD3+ T cells, PCBs (0.1 mg/kg/d) did increase F4/80+ macrophages particularly in female bladder. Collagen density was also examined to determine whether inflammatory events coincide with changes in the stromal extracellular matrix. PCBs (0.1 mg/kg/d) decreased collagen density in female bladder compared to control. PCBs also increased the number of cells undergoing cell division predominantly in male bladder. These results implicate perturbations to the immune system in relation to PCB effects on the bladder. Future study to define the underlying mechanisms could help understand how environmental factors can be risk factors for lower urinary tract symptoms.

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