Abstract
In human benign prostatic hyperplastic (BPH) tissue homogenates 5α-reduction of testosterone was examined at neutral pH. As Lineweaver-Burk and Eadie-Scatchard plots of estimated initial velocities against a wide range of substrate concentrations of 2nM to 3.2 μM were non-linear, the existence of two 5α-reductase isozymes in this tissue was surmised. Indeed, enzyme parameters at pH 7.0 suggested the presence of two isozymes with affinity constants of 1995 and 11.8 nM, characteristic of the well established human steroid 5α-reductase isozymes type I and II, respectively. The physiological roles of these isozyme activities remain puzzling. The specific activities, V max, of these subtypes indicated an approx. 6-fold higher maximum velocity of type I than of type II 5α-reductase in the human hyperplastic prostate at this pH. In contrast, the efficiency ratios, V max K m , demonstrated that the type II isozyme had a nearly 27 times higher potential in vivo activity than the type I isozyme, and is therefore most probably quantitatively responsible for dihydrotestosterone formation at physiological testosterone levels in this tissue at neutral pH. This is the first full paper on type I 5α-reductase activity in human BPH tissue.
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More From: Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
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