Department of Urology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL.
Division of Pediatric Urology, Department of Surgery, Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago, Chicago, IL.
Urology. 2020 Dec;146:242-247. doi: 10.1016/j.urology.2020.06.103. Epub 2020 Sep 3.
To determine the ability of testosterone and estrogen to reverse urethral hypovascularity secondary to hypogonadism, we analyzed the effects of testosterone and estrogen supplementation on castrated Sprague Dawley rats.
Twenty four Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into 4 groups: (1) non-castrate (NC) controls; (2) castrate (C) unsupplemented rats; (3) castrate rats that received testosterone (T), or (4) castrate rats that received estradiol (E). With immunohistochemistry, we measured vessel density (endothelial cell marker CD31), expression levels of androgen receptor (AR), TIE-2, and estrogen receptors ER-alpha and GPER1.
Urethral vascularity was significantly increased after both testosterone and estrogen supplementation (T: 8.92%, E: 7.66%, vs C: 3.62%; P <0.001 for both), surpassing that of NC (5.86%, P <0.001 for both). Testosterone restored AR expression to physiologic levels (T: 5.21%, NC: 4.54%, P =0.135), and upregulated expression of TIE-2 (T: 0.20%, NC: 0.43%, P <0.001), neither of which was expressed in the absence of testosterone. Expression levels of nuclear ER-alpha was nearly undetectable (0.06%-0.38%), while membrane-bound GPER1 expression was upregulated by estrogen (3.30%) compared to other groups (T: 2.01%, NC: 1.02%, C: 0.37%, P <0.01 for all). Increased vessel density was significantly associated with increased AR (r = 0.22, P = 0.019) and GPER1 expression (r = 0.25, P = 0.018) suggesting a mechanistic relationship.
Testosterone and estrogen exposure both restore periurethral vascularity in castrate (hypogonadal) rats via upregulation of AR/TIE-2 and GPER1 expression. Our results provide a foundation for testosterone or estrogen replacement in hypogonadal men to reverse atrophic effects of hypogonadism on the urethra.
为了确定睾酮和雌二醇逆转去势后尿道低灌注的能力,我们分析了睾酮和雌二醇补充对去势 Sprague Dawley 大鼠的影响。
将 24 只 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠分为 4 组:(1)非去势(NC)对照组;(2)未补充去势(C)大鼠;(3)去势后接受睾酮(T)补充的大鼠;(4)去势后接受雌二醇(E)补充的大鼠。通过免疫组织化学方法,我们测量了血管密度(内皮细胞标志物 CD31)、雄激素受体(AR)、TIE-2 以及雌激素受体 ER-α 和 GPER1 的表达水平。
睾酮和雌二醇补充后尿道血管密度均显著增加(T:8.92%,E:7.66%,C:3.62%;均<0.001),超过 NC 组(5.86%;均<0.001)。睾酮将 AR 表达恢复到生理水平(T:5.21%,NC:4.54%,P=0.135),并上调了 TIE-2 的表达(T:0.20%,NC:0.43%;均<0.001),而在没有睾酮的情况下,这两种表达均不存在。核内 ER-α 的表达水平几乎无法检测到(0.06%-0.38%),而膜结合型 GPER1 的表达则被雌二醇上调(3.30%),与其他组相比(T:2.01%,NC:1.02%,C:0.37%;均<0.01)。血管密度的增加与 AR(r=0.22,P=0.019)和 GPER1 表达(r=0.25,P=0.018)的增加显著相关,提示存在一种机制关系。
睾酮和雌二醇暴露均可通过上调 AR/TIE-2 和 GPER1 的表达来恢复去势(去势)大鼠的尿道周围血管密度。我们的研究结果为治疗去势后尿道萎缩提供了依据,可采用补充睾酮或雌二醇的方法治疗。