Literature DB >> 3793731

Androgen repression of the production of a 29-kilodalton protein and its mRNA in the rat ventral prostate.

A G Saltzman, R A Hiipakka, C Chang, S Liao.   

Abstract

The regression of the ventral prostate, after a rat is deprived of androgens by castration, is accompanied by a marked decrease in the prostate's ability to synthesize RNA and major proteins. Surprisingly, in vitro translation of prostate RNA, isolated from rats 2 days after castration, detects four proteins with Mr of approximately 29,000, 37,000, 46,000, and 49,000 whose message levels increased 4- to 12-fold compared to results from normal rats. According to cDNA dot hybridization analysis, the increase after castration in the level of the 29-kDa protein-mRNA (per unit amount of DNA) was reversed within 6 h by androgen treatment of castrated rats. In contrast, the level of a mRNA in male rat liver, which hybridized to a cloned probe for the prostate 29-kDa protein-mRNA was reduced by castration and increased by androgen treatment. During an in vitro incubation, the ventral prostates of normal rats were much less efficient than the prostates of rats castrated 2 days earlier in synthesizing a 29-kDa protein. Despite the fact that androgenic manipulation of rats induced very rapid and significant changes in the production of the 29-kDa protein and in the level of its mRNA, the cellular level of this protein in the prostate, as determined by radioimmunoassay, was maintained at near normal values throughout the 2-week experimental period. Thus, the prostate appears to have a mechanism, based on androgen repression of certain genes, to maintain the cellular levels of the 29-kDa protein and possibly other structurally or functionally important proteins during both the periods of androgen-dependent growth and the castration-induced regression. The loss of such a regulatory mechanism may result in androgen-independent abnormal prostate growth.

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Year:  1987        PMID: 3793731

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  6 in total

Review 1.  Active cell death in hormone-dependent tissues.

Authors:  M P Tenniswood; R S Guenette; J Lakins; M Mooibroek; P Wong; J E Welsh
Journal:  Cancer Metastasis Rev       Date:  1992-09       Impact factor: 9.264

2.  Post-castration rebound of an androgen regulated prostatic gene.

Authors:  R Sweetland; P C Sheppard; J G Dodd; R J Matusik
Journal:  Mol Cell Biochem       Date:  1988-11       Impact factor: 3.396

3.  Identification of an androgen-repressed mRNA in rat ventral prostate as coding for sulphated glycoprotein 2 by cDNA cloning and sequence analysis.

Authors:  S Bettuzzi; R A Hiipakka; P Gilna; S T Liao
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1989-01-01       Impact factor: 3.857

4.  Steroid-induced epithelial-fibroblastic conversion associated with syndecan suppression in S115 mouse mammary tumor cells.

Authors:  S Leppä; P Härkönen; M Jalkanen
Journal:  Cell Regul       Date:  1991-01

5.  Prostate Cancer - Old Problems and New Approaches. (Part II. Diagnostic and Prognostic Markers, Pathology and Biological Aspects).

Authors:  Kenneth V Honn; Amer Aref; Yong Q Chen; Michael L Cher; John D Crissman; Jeffrey D Forman; Xiang Gao; David Grignon; Maha Hussain; Arthur T Porter; Edson J Pontes; Bruce Redman; Wael Sakr; Richard Severson; Dean G Tang; David P Wood
Journal:  Pathol Oncol Res       Date:  1996       Impact factor: 3.201

Review 6.  Role of programmed cell death in carcinogenesis.

Authors:  J T Isaacs
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  1993-12       Impact factor: 9.031

  6 in total

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