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1 Steroid Biochemistry Laboratory,
Lemuel Shattuck Hospital, Departments of
Surgery (Division of Urology) and
Anatomy, Tufts University School of
Medicine, and Laboratory of Toxicology,
Harvard School of Public Health,
Boston, Massachusetts
Stromal-epithelial cell interactions may be important
for the regulation of normal and abnormal prostatic
growth. While androgen transformation by rat ventral
prostate and canine prostate has been investigated in
vivo and in organ culture, little is known about metabolic pathways in cultures of epithelial cells and fibroblasts. Metabolism of radioisotope-labeled 17
-hydroxy C19-steroids was studied in primary cultures of
highly-enriched rat ventral prostate and canine prostate
epithelial cells and fibroblasts isolated by selectiveattachment procedures. The fibroblasts contained little
testosterone 5
-reductase in contrast to high activity
in epithelial cells. We found high levels of 5
-androstane-3
,17
-diol (3
-diol) dehydrogenase and
the terminal 5
-androstane-3
,17
-diol (3
-diol) hydroxylases in both cell types; 3
-diol was a more effective precursor of 5
-dihydrotestosterone than was testosterone. For prostatic fibroblasts these pathways seem
to be differentiated functions, since rat-lung fibroblasts
converted 3
-diol to 5
-dihydrotestosterone and 3
diol. We conclude that epithelial cells and fibroblasts
make interactive contributions to prostatic androgen
metabolism.
Key words: rat ventral prostate, canine prostate, epithelial cells, fibroblasts, primary cell culture, testosterone 5
-reductase, 3
-hydroxysteroid oxidoreductase, 3
-hydroxy 5
-C19-steroid hydroxylases
Submitted on September 3, 1981
Revised on November 30, 1981
Accepted on January 20, 1982
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