Abstract

Aging in the rat is associated with a reduction in the detectable androgen receptor content of the ventral prostate. The reduction in cytoplasmic receptor content did not appear to be attributable to an aging-associated production of a receptor-inactivating factor or to an aging-associated change in the sedimentation properties of the androgen receptor of young and aged animals. Saturation analysis of cytoplasmic extracts prepared from two different breeds of similar albino rats and a genetically distinct strain of inbred brown rats demonstrated quantitative aging-associated reductions in the androgen-receptor content per cell of the ventral prostate. The reduction in receptor content per cell appeared to increase progressively in magnitude with increasing age. The mean value for the cytoplasmic androgen receptor sites per cell for the oldest animals (mean age 884 days) was only 14% of the mean value for the young mature animals (mean age 185 days) of the same breed. The binding affinities of the detectable androgen receptor of the young mature and aged animals were essentially identical. This observation does not eliminate the possibility that the observed reduction results from an aging-associated production of defective receptor. Evaluation of the total DNA content of the ventral prostate did not provide evidence for an aging-associated selective loss of receptor-containing cells. These data in toto were consistent with the interpretation that aging is associated with a mean reduction in the androgen-receptor content per receptor-containing cell. Both cytoplasmic and nuclear androgen retention were evaluated in vivo. These experiments provided qualitative confirmation of the in vitro saturation analyses as there was a highly significant aging-associated reduction in the amount of androgen specifically bound by these prostatic compartments. Total specific androgen retention by the ventral prostate of aging adults was reduced by 55% relative to young mature animals. This result was nearly identical to that obtained for the same breed and age category of animals when evaluated by in vitro saturation analysis. Preliminary in vitro experiments revealed a diminution in the uptake of androgen receptor by purified nuclei from aged animals relative to purified nuclei from young mature animals. The magnitude of the diminution in nuclear acceptor capacity was insufficient to account for the reduction in nuclear retention of androgen determined in vivo. The data were consistent with the interpretation that the cytoplasmic receptor is the major determinant of nuclear androgen retention in the ventral prostate.

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