Abstract

To determine whether benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) results from an imbalance between cell proliferation and apoptosis, and the extent to which the rates of these opposing processes are altered with the expression of the anti-death oncoprotein bcl-2. Ten prostate glands from normal men (mean age 43.7 years) were sampled according to McNeal's zonal anatomy, in addition to 30 prostate adenomas obtained from prostatectomy specimens from symptomatic patients (mean age 61.4 years). Tissue samples were fixed in formalin and embedded in paraffin. Proliferation and bcl-2 expression were assessed by immunostaining using Mib-1 and anti-bcl-2 antibodies, while apoptotic bodies were specifically stained using in situ nick translation. The percentage of positive cells was determined by optical microscopy. In normal epithelium, the rates of proliferation and apoptosis were increased in the peripheral zone (Mib-1 1.7%, apoptotic bodies 3.3%) compared with the central (0.2% vs 1.4%) and transition (0.1% vs 1.8%) zones. Proliferation was significantly greater in BPH than in normal prostate tissue (3.7%), contrasting with a stable rate of apoptosis (1.4%). In the normal prostate, bcl-2 was expressed by glandular and basal cells in the peripheral zone. In the central zone, bcl-2 was overexpressed in basal cells and in most glandular cells of the intraluminal ridges. Bcl-2 expression in the transition zone was limited to dispersed basal cells. In BPH, bcl-2 was strongly expressed by basal cells in mature glandular formations and in most cells of young small nodules. BPH may result from both an increase of proliferation within the basal compartment and a failure of apoptosis to counterbalance basal cell proliferation. Increased expression of bcl-2 may participate in this process by blocking apoptosis.

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