Aging mouse bladder mucosa generated more superoxide than the young control tissue (RLU/mg tissue: 571±64 vs. 400±41, n=27, 14, p<0.05). This change was not seen in bladder smooth muscle (RLU/mg tissue: 25±3 vs. 34±7, p>0.05). In aging Nox subtype knockout mice, the superoxide production was reduced in Nox1, Nox2 and Nox4 deletion compared with their wildtype littermate controls. Substance P, an inflammatory factor involved in bladder inflammation and pain, augmented superoxide production from bladder mucosa (170±38, n=11, p<0.05) and smooth muscle (193±41% control, n=11, p<0.05) in aging but not in young age control bladders. In human bladder mucosa biopsies, Western blot showed the expression of Nox 2 (high), Nox1 (low) and Nox5 (low) subtypes (n=5-6 samples). NADPH stimulated significant superoxide production with a level of 192±65 RLU/mg tissue (n=8, p<0.01 vs. baseline control). The specificity of superoxide detected in the tissue was verified by its sensitivity to superoxide scavenger Tiron (10mM). Angiotensin II, a bladder pathology relevant inflammatory factor and Nox activator, increased the superoxide production to 188±28 % of the control (n=5, p<0.05). In urothelium functional experiments, Angiotensin II also enhanced ATP release from these human mucosa biopsies (control vs. Angiotensin II, 59±16 and 180±62 pmoles/g tissue/min respectively, n=8, p<0.05), with a 266±42% increase. GSK1016790A (1µM), a specific activator for TRPV4 receptor mediating sensory dysfunction and bladder pain, also increased ATP release to 279± 55 % of control (n=12, p<0.01). Control experiments using mouse bladder mucosa showed that GSK1016790A was able to enhance superoxide production (RLU/mg tissue, median with interquartile range: control, 70 [33, 123]; GSK, 136 [44, 219]; n=10, p<0.05, Wilcoxon test). The GSK stimulated peak ATP level and the net increase of ATP release were much higher in samples from the overactive bladders (peak ATP levels, ρmoles/g tissue/min; OAB, 693±239 (n=6) vs. control, 190±98 (n=14), p<0.05; net increase: OAB, 190±98 (n=6) vs. control, 88±49 (n=14), p<0.05). The proportional increase of ATP release triggered by GSK was positively correlated with age in the OAB group (n=6, r=0.88, p<0.05). However, this increase was not correlated with age in the control group.