Castration-Induced Apoptotic Cell Death in the Brown Norway Rat Prostate Decreases as a Function of Age1
Growth and differentiation of the prostate gland depends upon androgens, yet overgrowth of the human prostate occurs later in life when serum levels of testosterone are declining. We have reported a similar phenomenon in the Brown Norway rat, but the age-dependent overgrowth of the prostate is confi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Endocrinology (Philadelphia) 2000-02, Vol.141 (2), p.821-832 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Growth and differentiation of the prostate gland depends upon
androgens, yet overgrowth of the human prostate occurs later in life
when serum levels of testosterone are declining. We have reported a
similar phenomenon in the Brown Norway rat, but the age-dependent
overgrowth of the prostate is confined to the dorsal and lateral lobes
and, hence, is lobe specific. Because tissue growth depends upon the
balance between proliferation and death of cells, the present study was
designed to investigate whether cell death differed in the various
prostatic lobes of Brown Norway rats as a function of age. Apoptosis of
cells in the ventral, dorsal, lateral, and anterior lobes of the
prostate was examined in young (4-month-old) and old (24-month-old)
Brown Norway rats after castration. Whereas castration caused tissue
weights of all four prostatic lobes to decrease over the course of 10
days, this occurred more rapidly and to a greater magnitude in the
ventral than in the dorsal, lateral, and anterior lobes. Tissue DNA
content, a measure of cell number, decreased only in the ventral lobe
after castration. DNA fragmentation, indicative of apoptotic cell
death, was detected by in situ labeling using the
terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling
method and as intranucleosomal cleavage of genomic DNA analyzed by
agarose gel electrophoresis. Both methods demonstrated the correlation
between loss of DNA content and apoptotic cell death in the ventral
lobe, whereas only the highly sensitive terminal
deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL)
method revealed relatively few dying cells in the dorsal, lateral, and
anterior lobes after castration. Moreover, when examined as a function
of age, less cell death occurred in all four lobes of old rats compared
with young rats. In both young and old rat prostates, cell death was
observed in epithelial and stromal cells within the ventral lobe where
apoptotic cells were detected throughout the branched ductal network
and were not restricted to a particular region. Taken together, these
studies demonstrate the marked differences in cell death and survival
between the different rat prostatic lobes in response to castration and
further suggest that the androgen-sensitive apoptotic response is age
dependent. Hence, the lower rates of cell death observed for the dorsal
and lateral lobes, accompanied by the further decline that occurs with
increasing age, are important components of the age |
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ISSN: | 0013-7227 1945-7170 |
DOI: | 10.1210/endo.141.2.7339 |