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1 Department of Urology,
Northwestern University, The Medical
School, Chicago, Illinois
To understand further the effect of prolactin (PRL) on
prostatic growth, the present study was undertaken to
determine if the augmentation of testosterone (T)-stimulated growth by PRL is mediated before or after
the formation of dihydrotestoterone (DHT). Mature
male Sprague-Dawley rats were castrated and treated
with subcutaneous Silastic implants containing either T
or DHT. Serum PRL was elevated by grafting, under
the kidney capsule, pituitaries from two female rats,
while controls received grafts of muscle. Three weeks
later, all animals were sacrificed. Animals bearing pituitary grafts had an average serum PRL level of 125 to
140 ng/ml while PRL levels for controls were 15 to 20
ng/ml. T treatment provided 1.37 ± 0.11 ng T/ml serum
and the DHT capsules produced serum DHT levels of
1.16 ± 0.12 ng/ml. Under these conditions, the lateral
prostate showed a specific growth response to PRL: wet
weight, protein content, protein concentration, and
DNA levels were all significantly greater in engrafted
rats treated with either T or DHT than in their respective controls. On histologic examination, elevated PRL
levels were associated with proliferative changes of the
lateral lobe which included marked papillary infolding
and acinar epithelial hyperplasia. This alteration was
similar in both steroid-treated groups. These data show
that PRL has the same effect on DHT-maintained lateral
lobes as it does on the testosterone-maintained prostate
and indicate that the PRL effect is not mediated prior to
T conversion to DHT but rather at a site beyond DHT
formation.
Key words: prostate, prolactin, testosterone, dihydrotestosterone
Submitted on November 5, 1981
Revised on January 25, 1982
Accepted on January 26, 1982
This article has been cited by other articles:
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R. W. Steger, V. Chandrashekar, W. Zhao, A. Bartke, and N. D. Horseman Neuroendocrine and Reproductive Functions in Male Mice with Targeted Disruption of the Prolactin Gene Endocrinology, September 1, 1998; 139(9): 3691 - 3695. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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