Bladder pain in an LL-37 interstitial cystitis and painful bladder syndrome model.
Jia. Wanjian W; Schults. Austin J AJ; Jensen. Mark Martin MM; Ye. Xiangyang X; Alt. Jeremiah A JA; Prestwich. Glenn D GD; Oottamasathien. Siam S
Key Findings
- Higher LL-37 doses cause stronger bladder pain in mice
- Pain continues to increase up to 7 days after exposure
- Pain levels do not correlate with measured inflammation markers
Practical Outcomes
- For most biohackers, this study offers little direct guidance because it’s an animal model and LL-37 isn’t a common supplement. It does suggest caution if you ever consider using LL-37‑based products, as they might cause bladder irritation independent of inflammation.
Summary
Researchers gave mice a peptide called LL-37 in their bladders and found that higher doses caused more pain, and the pain kept getting worse over a week, even though the usual signs of inflammation didn’t match the pain levels. This shows that LL-37 can trigger bladder discomfort in a dose‑dependent way that isn’t directly tied to inflammation.
Abstract
Our goal was to evaluate the pain response in an LL-37 induced murine model for interstitial cystitis/painful bladder syndrome (IC/PBS). In particular, we sought to characterize the dose dependence, time-course, and relationship of LL-37 induced bladder inflammation and pain. The IC/PBS model was induced in C57Bl/6 mice by instilling 50 μL of LL-37, an immunomodulatory human cathelicidin (anti-microbial peptide), in the bladder for 1 hr. Pain responses were measured using von Frey filaments (0.04 gm to 4.0 gm) before and after LL-37 instillation. Inflammation was evaluated using tissue myeloperoxidase (MPO) assay, gross inspection, and microscopic histologic examination. The dose response experiment demonstrated a graded pain response, with higher concentrations of LL-37 challenge yielding higher pain responses across all stimuli tested. Statistical significance was seen when comparing 1.0 gm von Frey filament results at 320 μM (68 ± 8% response) vs. 0 μM (38 ± 6% response). Interestingly, pain responses did not attenuate across time but increased significantly after 5 (p=0.0012) and 7 days (p=0.0096). Comparison with MPO data suggested that pain responses could be independent of inflammation. We demonstrated within our LL-37 induced IC/PBS model pain occurs in a dose-dependent fashion, pain responses persist beyond the initial point of insult, and our dose response and time course experiments demonstrated that pain was independent of inflammation.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-09-01T00:00:00.000Z