Rapid reduction in blood flow to the rat ventral prostate gland after castration: Preliminary evidence that androgens influence prostate size by regulating blood flow to the prostate gland and prostatic endothelial cell survival
- 1 August 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Prostate
- Vol. 36 (3) , 201-206
- https://doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1097-0045(19980801)36:3<201::aid-pros9>3.0.co;2-j
Abstract
BACKGROUND Androgenic steroids regulate the development and size of the mammalian prostate gland. The mechanism(s) for this growth control might involve a direct effect on prostate cell proliferation and survival as well as more complex effects on the tissue environment supporting nourishment and oxygenation. In this study, we evaluated an animal model of androgen action on the prostate, the rat ventral prostate gland, to determine whether acute androgen withdrawal, by means of castration, might alter the primary blood flow to the prostate gland and for the effects of castration on prostatic endothelial cell viability. METHODS Groups of rats studied included intact control males, males that had been surgically castrated, or males that received a sham-surgical castration. Relative blood flow (RBF) to the rat ventral prostate glands and rat bladders were measured at 18 and 24 hr after castration or sham castration using a fluorescent microsphere infusion technique. Thin sections from fixed and embedded rat ventral prostate glands obtained from unoperated or 12-hr castrated rats were analyzed by the TUNEL immunostaining technique to microscopically identify and quantify apoptotic epithelial, stromal, and endothelial cells. RESULTS RBF to the rat ventral prostate was reduced by 38% at 18 hr after castration when compared with intact or sham-operated rats and by 45% at 24 hr after castration (P = 0.038 unoperated/0.025 sham operated). In contrast, RBF to the bladder was not significantly different between any of the groups in the 24-hr castrate experiment. TUNEL staining analysis of ventral prostate tissues obtained from 12-hr castrated rats showed only rare TUNEL-positive epithelial cells similar to the control tissue but significantly increased TUNEL labeling for endothelial and other ventral prostate stromal cells. CONCLUSIONS Castration resulted in a rapid and significant reduction of blood flow to the mature rat ventral prostate gland that was not seen in the bladder. This reduction precedes the appearance of apoptosis in the epithelial cells of the tissue but more coincided with the appearance of TUNEL-positive prostate vascular endothelial and stromal cells, suggesting that androgens support the survival of cells in the vascular and stromal compartment of the rat prostate as well as in the prostatic epithelium. These preliminary data support the concept that androgen action on the prostate might involve primary regulation of prostate blood flow and prostate vascular cell vitality. Prostate 36:201–206, 1998.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Decrement of blood flow precedes the involution of the ventral prostate in the rat after castrationUrological Research, 1997
- Voltage-dependent potentiation of neuronal L-type calcium channels due to state-dependent phosphorylationAmerican Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology, 1995
- Chapter 16 Hormonal Control of Apoptosis: The Rat Prostate Gland as a Model SystemPublished by Elsevier ,1995
- Validation of fluorescent-labeled microspheres for measurement of regional organ perfusionJournal of Applied Physiology, 1993
- Identification of programmed cell death in situ via specific labeling of nuclear DNA fragmentation.The Journal of cell biology, 1992
- Androgen Receptor Localization in Different Cell Types of the Adult Rat Prostate*Endocrinology, 1991
- Activation of Programmed Cell Death in the Rat Ventral Prostate after Castration*Endocrinology, 1988
- Cellular response to androgen depletion and repletion in the rat ventral prostate: Autoradiography and morphometric analysisThe Prostate, 1985
- Successive waves of apoptosis in the rat prostate after repeated withdrawal of testosterone stimulationPathology, 1984
- Deletion of cells by apoptosis during castration-induced involution of the rat prostateVirchows Archiv B Cell Pathology, 1973