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Publication : Elevated androgens and prolactin in aromatase-deficient mice cause enlargement, but not malignancy, of the prostate gland.

First Author  McPherson SJ Year  2001
Journal  Endocrinology Volume  142
Issue  6 Pages  2458-67
PubMed ID  11356695 Mgi Jnum  J:70204
Mgi Id  MGI:2136569 Doi  10.1210/endo.142.6.8079
Citation  McPherson SJ, et al. (2001) Elevated androgens and prolactin in aromatase-deficient mice cause enlargement, but not malignancy, of the prostate gland. Endocrinology 142(6):2458-67
abstractText  Although androgens are the main steroids controlling the growth of the mammalian prostate, increasing evidence demonstrates that estrogens also regulate prostate development and growth. This study describes the effects of estrogen deficiency using aromatase knockout mice (ArKO) with targeted disruption of the cyp19 gene. Serum and tissue testosterone and 5alpha-dihydrotestosterone as well as serum PRL levels are significantly (P < 0.05) elevated in mature male ArKO mice. Histological, stereological, and immunohistochemical studies demonstrated enlargement of the ventral, anterior, and dorsolateral lobes of the prostate in young and older ArKO mice. Hyperplasia of the epithelial, interstitial, and luminal compartments was identified and associated with up-regulation of androgen receptors. There was no evidence of malignancy as the animals aged (up to 56 weeks). The changes observed in the prostates of ArKO mice were unaffected by maintaining mice on regular or soy-free diets. It is concluded in ArKO mice that, despite the long-term elevation of androgens and PRL, the absence of estrogen in these animals does not result in induction of malignancy in the prostate gland.
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