We have previously found that the androgen receptor gene is expressed both in normal and adenomatous human adrenal cortex and in the NCI-H295 human adrenocortical cancer cell line. Furthermore, we have observed that dihydrotestosterone (DHT) at physiological concentrations (10 −11 M) inhibits human adrenocortical cell growth in vitro and slightly decreases c-myc RNA levels in NCI-H295 cells. As c-myc is probably not the main mechanism mediating DHT-induced inhibition of cell growth, other genes controlling cell proliferation may be involved. Transforming Growth Factor beta (TGF β) is a regulatory peptide that acts by both autocrine and paracrine mechanisms to control proliferation and differentiation, and there is previous evidence that TGF β may exert an antimitotic effect on human fetal adrenal cells in vitro. This study examines a possible role for TGF β 1 in mediating the DHT-induced reduction of human adrenocortical cell growth. TGF β1 and its receptor (TGF β RII) are expressed in DHT-treated and nontreated NCI-H295 cells; on Northern blot analysis 24-h treatment with DHT (10 −11 M) produced a small increase in TGF β RII RNA, and quantitative RT-PCR showed a 1.5-fold increase in TGF β 1 RNA levels. These findings suggest that TGF β 1 and its receptor may be involved in DHT-induced inhibition of human adrenocortical cell growth.
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