Bosland M C, Dreef-Van Der Meulen H C, Sukumar S, Ofner P, Leav I, Han X, Liehr J G
Institute of Environmental Medicine, NYU Medical Center, Tuxedo 10987.
Princess Takamatsu Symp. 1991;22:109-23.
Prostate cancer is the most frequently occurring non-skin cancer in men in the U.S.A. and other Western countries, but its etiology is poorly understood. Human prostate carcinogenesis has been viewed as a multi-step process involving progression from low histologic grade, small latent carcinoma, to large, higher grade, metastasizing carcinoma. However, recent data suggest that a variety of pathogenetic pathways exist. The precise role of hormones in the genesis of human prostate cancer remains largely undefined. It is difficult to investigate stages in the development of human prostate cancer, but some animal models provide opportunities in this regard. Short-term treatment of rats with chemical carcinogens will produce a low incidence (5-15%) of prostate cancer, provided that prostatic cell proliferation is enhanced during carcinogen exposure. A high carcinoma incidence can only be produced by chronic treatment with testosterone following administration of carcinogens such as N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU). Testosterone markedly enhances prostate carcinogenesis even at doses that do not measurably increase circulating testosterone. Thus, testosterone is a strong tumor promoter for the rat prostate. All such MNU-initiated, testosterone-promoted tumors are adenocarcinomas mostly originating from the dorsolateral and anterior, but not ventral, prostate lobes. A high frequency (70%) of activation of the K-ras gene by a G35 to A mutation occurs in these carcinomas. A variable frequency of activation of H-ras and K-ras genes occurs in human prostate carcinomas. Another rat model, representing a different pathogenetic pathway, involves chronic administration of estradiol-17 beta in combination with low-dose testosterone. The resulting carcinomas are low-grade and originate exclusively from periurethral ducts of the dorsolateral and anterior prostate. We recently found a major adduct by 32P postlabeling analysis in the tissue region that includes these ducts, but not in, e.g., the ventral prostate, of rats treated for 16-24 weeks. While it is unknown whether testosterone is a tumor promoter in this system, the presence of a DNA adduct suggests that estradiol-17 beta acts as a tumor-initiating agent in this system.
前列腺癌是美国和其他西方国家男性中最常见的非皮肤癌,但对其病因了解甚少。人类前列腺癌发生被视为一个多步骤过程,包括从低组织学分级、小的潜伏癌发展为大的、高分级的转移性癌。然而,最近的数据表明存在多种致病途径。激素在人类前列腺癌发生中的精确作用在很大程度上仍不明确。很难研究人类前列腺癌发展的各个阶段,但一些动物模型在这方面提供了机会。用化学致癌物对大鼠进行短期治疗会产生低发病率(5 - 15%)的前列腺癌,前提是在致癌物暴露期间前列腺细胞增殖增强。只有在给予致癌物如N - 甲基 - N - 亚硝基脲(MNU)后长期用睾酮治疗才能产生高发病率的癌症。睾酮即使在剂量未显著增加循环睾酮水平时也能显著增强前列腺癌发生。因此,睾酮是大鼠前列腺的强肿瘤促进剂。所有这些由MNU启动、睾酮促进的肿瘤都是腺癌,大多起源于背外侧和前部前列腺叶,而非腹侧前列腺叶。在这些癌中,K - ras基因通过G35到A突变激活的频率很高(70%)。H - ras和K - ras基因在人类前列腺癌中的激活频率各不相同。另一种代表不同致病途径的大鼠模型涉及长期联合给予低剂量睾酮和17β - 雌二醇。由此产生的癌分级较低,且仅起源于背外侧和前部前列腺的尿道周围导管。我们最近通过32P后标记分析在包括这些导管的组织区域发现了一个主要加合物,但在接受16 - 24周治疗的大鼠的腹侧前列腺等其他区域未发现。虽然尚不清楚睾酮在该系统中是否为肿瘤促进剂,但DNA加合物的存在表明17β - 雌二醇在该系统中作为肿瘤起始剂起作用。