Abstract
Purpose Considering the hypothesis that androgen-independent but growth factor dependent epithelial cell division may be important in the development and progression of prostate cancer and that protein tyrosine kinases and phosphotyrosine protein phosphatases are key enzymes modulating the levels of specific phosphotyrosylated proteins implicated in several growth factor regulated signal transduction pathways, our aim was to study the cellular distribution of phosphotyrosine proteins in normal and hyperplastic dog prostates as well as in those of castrated dogs supplemented with either androgens or estrogens in order to modify the relative proportion of basal versus secretory epithelial cells. Materials and Methods Following the determination of optimal conditions to specifically detect phosphotyrosine proteins by a rabbit polyclonal antibody directed against phosphotyrosine, immunohistochemistry was performed on prostate tissue sections from these experimental animals. In addition to morphological criteria, an antibody to high molecular weight cytokeratins and antisera against arginine esterase were used to selectively identify basal and secretory cells. Since prostatic acid phosphatase may be involved in the local regulation of phosphotyrosine proteins, its distribution was also evaluated with a human prostatic acid phosphatase antiserum. Results In all prostatic tissues examined, basal epithelial cells were preferentially and specifically stained with antiphosphotyrosine. The staining intensity per basal cell was highest in the estrogen-supplemented dogs. In addition, basal cells were numerically increased and all were highly immunoreactive for high molecular weight cytokeratins. In prostates displaying a well-differentiated glandular epithelium, the number of positive basal cells and their staining intensity varied in the following order: normal less than hyperplastic less than androgen-supplemented dogs. At all times, the levels of phosphotyrosine proteins in prostatic acid phosphatase and arginine esterase positive cells (secretory) remained low. Fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells were unreactive to antiphosphotyrosine, even though estrogen supplementation increased the prostatic stromal volume. Conclusions The preferential localization of phosphotyrosine proteins in basal cells, their increased level per cell and the number of positive cells in the different experimental animals support the concept that basal cells represent the stem cells of the prostate. The sex steroid-mediated up-regulation of protein phosphorylation on tyrosine residues in these cells suggests that their proliferation is likely to involve growth factor regulated signal transduction pathways. In this respect, the lack of maturation of basal cells and the differentiation of secretory cells induced by androgen deprivation, combined with estrogen stimulation, favors the activation of these pathways and cell growth. On the other hand, the activation of glandular cell differentiation and the increase of stromal volume do not alter the threshold level of protein tyrosine kinase and phosphatase activities in secretory cells, fibroblasts and smooth muscle cells.
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