Increased Androgen Receptor Expression Correlates with Development of Age-Dependent, Lobe-Specific Spontaneous Hyperplasia of the Brown Norway Rat Prostate
Androgens are essential for development and differentiated function, as well as proliferation and survival of cells within the prostate gland. Age-related changes in the hormonal milieu, marked by a decrease in the serum androgen to estrogen ratio may contribute to the evolution of pathological chan...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Endocrinology (Philadelphia) 2001-09, Vol.142 (9), p.4066-4075 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Androgens are essential for development and differentiated
function, as well as proliferation and survival of cells within the
prostate gland. Age-related changes in the hormonal milieu, marked by a
decrease in the serum androgen to estrogen ratio may contribute to the
evolution of pathological changes, such as benign prostatic hyperplasia
and carcinoma of the prostate gland, in older men. A similar phenomenon
occurs in Brown Norway rats, in which the serum testosterone to
estradiol ratio declines with age, and despite the lower serum
testosterone level, age-dependent prostatic hyperplasia develops in the
dorsal and lateral lobes, but not in the ventral lobe. To evaluate a
role for changes in androgen action in the evolution of prostatic
hyperplasia, we compared the immunostaining intensity of androgen
receptor in the different prostate lobes from young (4 months of age)
and old (24 months of age) Brown Norway rats. Androgen receptor
immunostaining was present in the nuclei of all epithelial cells and
some stromal cells throughout the prostatic ducts of each lobe from
both young and old rats. Whereas androgen receptor immunostaining
intensity decreased in luminal epithelial cells of the ventral prostate
from old rats, it increased in luminal epithelial cells of the dorsal
and lateral lobes from old rats, when compared with young rats. To
validate immunocytochemical studies, Western blot analyses were
performed. The total tissue level of androgen receptor decreased by
30% in the ventral lobe of old rats, whereas tissue levels of androgen
receptor increased 2.7-fold and 1.3-fold in the dorsal and lateral
lobes, respectively, of old rats. Similarly, the percentage of
epithelial cells staining positive for the proliferation marker,
proliferating cell nuclear antigen, was increased approximately
2-fold in the dorsal and lateral lobes as a function of older age. The
presence of higher levels of androgen receptor and increased number of
proliferating cell nuclear antigen-positive cells in the dorsal and
lateral lobes of old rats suggest that changes in androgen receptor
levels may be related to the lobe-specific proliferation of cells that
occurs with increasing age. Additional evidence for lobe-specific
regulation of androgen receptor expression was obtained from Western
blots and by immunocytochemistry following castration. Androgen
receptor levels in the ventral and dorsal lobes, but not the lateral
lobe, of young and old rats were down-regulated in the absenc |
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ISSN: | 0013-7227 1945-7170 |
DOI: | 10.1210/endo.142.9.8376 |