| Literature DB >> 28217447 |
Monica G Ferrini1, Nestor F Gonzalez-Cadavid2, Jacob Rajfer3.
Abstract
Erectile dysfunction (ED) will visit every man at some time in his life. The age at when that knock on the door is heard is totally dependent on one's genetics as well as other extrinsic factors. Unlike guests who come for a visit and then leave, once ED shows up it tends to hang around forever. To add insult to injury, the longer ED hangs around, the worse it will get. It is estimated that by the time a man is in his 40's, he has about a 40% chance of having some form of ED and this prevalence increases about 10% per decade thereafter. This suggests that the aging related process that leads to ED begins early in life. It turns out that the most common cause of ED, regardless of the patient's age, is due to a problem with the vascular system of the penis. However, this specific aging related vascular problem is not caused by arterial disease but due to a dysfunction and/or loss of the corporal smooth muscle cells (SMC), the main constituent of the corporal sinusoids. As one gets older, these SMC continue to degrade and disappear. When approximately 15% of these cells have been impacted, it results in an inability of the corporal tissue to retain and/or prevent the blood from "leaking" out of the corporal sinusoids into the systemic veins. However, the corporal SMC themselves begin to combat this aging process by expressing the inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) enzyme to make nitric oxide (NO) in an attempt to quench the high intracellular oxidative stress responsible for the SMC apoptosis. When this iNOS pathway is then pharmacologically upregulated, reversal of these aging related changes in the corpora with correction of the venous leakage is observed. Since we believe that aging related ED is pathologically the same disorder as essential hypertension, the development of a therapeutic regimen that can halt, delay or possibly reverse the cellular processes that lead to aging related ED should also be applicable to those patients diagnosed with essential hypertension.Entities:
Keywords: Erectile dysfunction (ED); aging; inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS); nitric oxide (NO)
Year: 2017 PMID: 28217447 PMCID: PMC5313305 DOI: 10.21037/tau.2016.11.18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Androl Urol ISSN: 2223-4683
Figure 1Schematic representation of the corporal tissue in the (A) normal erect state and (B) partially erect state where CVOD is present. Note the compression of the subtunical veins in A and inadequate compression of the veins in B.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the difference between nNOS and iNOS in the corporal smooth muscle cell. nNOS is involved in the neurogenic stimulation of nitric oxide (NO) within the nerve terminals. This neurally derived NO rapidly traverses from the nerve terminal into the cytoplasm of the underlying smooth muscle cell to activate guanylyl cyclase to form cGMP from GTP and induce smooth muscle relaxation (the erectile state). cGMP is endogenously degraded by PDE into 5’-GMP. iNOS originates from the smooth muscle cell itself and the NO from iNOS combats the oxidative stress that is ongoing within the mitochondria (M).
Figure 3Aging related events ongoing in the vascular smooth muscle cell. Aging induces oxidative stress which leads to apoptosis of the smooth muscle cells and induction of iNOS. NO from iNOS combats the oxidative stress and helps retard the apoptotic process within the cell.