Androgen-Induced Regrowth in the Castrated Rat Ventral Prostate: Role of 5α-Reductase1
Testosterone (T), the major circulating androgen, must be converted to dihydrotestosterone (DHT) by the enzyme 5α-reductase (5α-R) to be maximally active in the prostate. The present study was designed to determine the relative potency of T and DHT on regrowth of the involuted prostate and to elucid...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Endocrinology (Philadelphia) 1999-10, Vol.140 (10), p.4509-4515 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Testosterone (T), the major circulating androgen, must be converted to
dihydrotestosterone (DHT) by the enzyme 5α-reductase (5α-R) to be
maximally active in the prostate. The present study was designed to
determine the relative potency of T and DHT on regrowth of the
involuted prostate and to elucidate the role of 5α-R in the growing
prostate. To create dose-response curves for intraprostatic T or DHT,
rats were castrated for 2 weeks to allow their prostates to fully
regress and then given T implants of various sizes in the presence or
absence of the 5α-R inhibitor, finasteride. Markers for
androgen effects on regrowth of the prostate were prostate weight, duct
mass (a measure of secretory activity) and DNA content (a measure of
cell number). To assess the relative uptake of T and DHT by the
prostate, a comparison was made of intraprostatic DHT levels resulting
from T and DHT implants.
In the prostate, 1.6–1.9 times more T than DHT was required to achieve
a half-maximal response for each of the three markers of prostate
regrowth. The dose-response curves revealed that thresholds for
intraprostatic T and DHT had to be attained before significant growth
was observed. The threshold for T was 2- to 3-fold greater than that
for DHT. However, at high intraprostatic concentrations, the effects of
T mimicked those of DHT. When the relationship between serum T levels
and prostate regrowth was considered, 13 times more serum T was
required for half-maximal prostate regrowth when its conversion to DHT
was blocked by finasteride. This is partly due to
decreased androgen accumulation in the prostate when T was the major
intraprostatic androgen. Finally, T or DHT implants in the absence of
finasteride resulted in similar intraprostatic DHT levels,
indicating that uptake of each serum androgen into the prostate was
similar. However, to achieve similar levels of DHT or T in serum, much
larger DHT pellets were needed, suggesting more rapid metabolism of DHT
in tissues other than the prostate.
We conclude that the role of 5α-R is 2-fold: it converts testosterone
into a modestly more potent androgen and enhances prostatic
accumulation of androgen. DHT, in principle, could serve equally well
as T as the circulating androgen, although the rate of DHT production
would have to be considerably higher to counter the apparent rapid
clearance from serum. In addition, we hypothesize that T has arisen as
the major circulating androgen instead of DHT because it can be
aromatized to est |
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ISSN: | 0013-7227 1945-7170 |
DOI: | 10.1210/endo.140.10.7039 |