In the present study we assessed how ionizing radiation affects TLR4-stimulated immune activation in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced cystitis. LPS or saline was administered intravesically to female rats followed by urinary bladder irradiation (20 Gy) 24 h later or sham treatment.
Presence in the urinary bladder of inflammatory cells (mast cells, CD3+, ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule 1 (Iba-1)+, CD68+, CD40+, CD80+, CD11c + and CD206 + cells) and expression of oxidative stress (8-OHdG), hypoxia (HIF1 alpha) and antioxidative responses (NRF2, HO-1, SOD1, SOD2, catalase) were assessed 14 days later with western blot, qPCR and/or immunohistochemistry. LPS stimulation resulted in a decrease of Iba-1 + cells in the urothelium, an increase in mast cells in the submucosa and a decrease in the bladder protein expression of HO-1, while no changes in the bladder expression of 8-OHdG, NRF2, SOD1, SOD2, catalase and HIF1 alpha were observed.
Bladder irradiation inhibited the LPS-driven increase in mast cells and the decrease in Iba1 + cells. Combining LPS and radiation increased the expression of 8-OHdG and number of CD3-positive cells in the urothelium and led to a decrease in NRF2 alpha gene expression in the urinary bladder.
In conclusion, irradiation may attenuate LPS-induced immune responses in the urinary bladder but potentiates LPS-induced oxidative stress, which as a consequence may have an impact on the urinary bladder immune sensing of pathogens and danger signals.