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Publication : Molecular mechanisms of bladder outlet obstruction in transgenic male mice overexpressing aromatase (Cyp19a1).

First Author  Lin W Year  2011
Journal  Am J Pathol Volume  178
Issue  3 Pages  1233-44
PubMed ID  21356374 Mgi Jnum  J:169686
Mgi Id  MGI:4941660 Doi  10.1016/j.ajpath.2010.11.056
Citation  Lin W, et al. (2011) Molecular mechanisms of bladder outlet obstruction in transgenic male mice overexpressing aromatase (cyp19a1). Am J Pathol 178(3):1233-44
abstractText  We investigated the etiology and molecular mechanisms of bladder outlet obstruction (BOO). Transgenic (Tg) male mice overexpressing aromatase (Cyp19a1) under the ubiquitin C promoter in the estrogen-susceptible C57Bl/6J genetic background (AROM+/6J) developed inguinal hernia by 2 months and severe BOO by 9 to 10 months, with 100% penetrance. These mice gradually developed uremia, renal failure, renal retention, and finally died. The BOO bladders were threefold larger than in age-matched wild-type (WT) males and were filled with urine on necropsy. Hypotrophic smooth muscle cells formed the thin detrusor urinae muscle, and collagen III accumulation contributed to the reduced compliance of the bladder. p-AKT and ERalpha expression were up-regulated and Pten expression was down-regulated in the BOO bladder urothelium. Expression of only ERalpha in the intradetrusor fibroblasts suggests a specific role of this estrogen receptor form in urothelial proliferation. Inactivation of Pten, which in turn activated the p-AKT pathway, was strictly related to the activation of the ERalpha pathway in the BOO bladders. Human relevance for these findings was provided by increased expression of p-AKT, PCNA, and ERalpha and decreased expression of PTEN in severe human BOO samples, compared with subnormal to mild samples. These findings clarify the involvement of estrogen excess and/or imbalance of the androgen/estrogen ratio in the molecular pathogenetic mechanisms of BOO and provide a novel lead into potential treatment strategies for BOO.
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