Gewählte Publikation:
SHR
Neuro
Krebs
Kardio
Lipid
Stoffw
Microb
Simanainen, U; Lampinen, A; Henneicke, H; Brennan, TC; Heinevetter, U; Harwood, DT; McNamara, K; Herrmann, M; Seibel, MJ; Handelsman, DJ; Zhou, H.
Long-term corticosterone treatment induced lobe-specific pathology in mouse prostate.
Prostate. 2011; 71(3):289-297
Doi: 10.1002/pros.21242
Web of Science
PubMed
FullText
FullText_MUG
- Co-Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
-
Herrmann Markus
- Altmetrics:
- Dimensions Citations:
- Plum Analytics:
- Scite (citation analytics):
- Abstract:
-
Glucocorticoids influence prostate development and pathology, yet the underlying mechanisms including possible direct glucocorticoid effect on the prostate are not well characterized.
We evaluated the expression of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) together with the effects of supraphysiological glucocorticoid (corticosterone) on mouse prostate morphology and epithelial proliferation. Mature male mice were treated by weekly subdermal implantation of depot pellets containing either 1.5 mg corticosterone or placebo providing steady-state release for 4 weeks.
Corticosterone treatment significantly increased dorsolateral and anterior prostate weights as well as prostate epithelial cell proliferation while epithelial apoptosis remained low upon corticosterone treatment. Histological analysis of the anterior lobe demonstrated abnormal, highly disorganized luminal epithelium with frequent formation of bridge-like structures lined by continuous layer of basal cells not observed following placebo treatment. Molecular analysis revealed corticosterone-induced increase in expression of stromal growth factor Fgf10 which, together with prominent stromal GR expression, suggest that glucocorticoid modify stromal-to-epithelial signaling in the mouse prostate. The mitogenic effects were prostate specific and not mediated by systemic effects on testosterone production suggesting that corticosterone effects were primarily mediated via prostate GR expression.
These data demonstrate that murine prostate is significantly and directly influenced by corticosterone treatment via aberrant stromal-to-epithelial growth factor signaling.
Copyright © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
-
Animals -
-
Apoptosis - drug effects
-
Body Weight - drug effects
-
Cell Proliferation - drug effects
-
Corticosterone - blood
-
Corticosterone - toxicity
-
Gene Expression - drug effects
-
Male -
-
Mice -
-
Organ Size - drug effects
-
Prostate - drug effects
-
Prostate - pathology
-
Receptors, Androgen - analysis
-
Receptors, Glucocorticoid - analysis
- Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
-
prostate
-
glucocorticoid receptor
-
corticosterone
-
mouse
-
prostate pathology