Influence of the alpha1-adrenergic antagonist, doxazosin, on noradrenaline-induced modulation of cytoskeletal proteins in cultured hyperplastic prostatic stromal cells |
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Authors: | Smith P Rhodes N P Ke Y Foster C S |
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Affiliation: | Department of Cellular and Molecular Pathology, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom. phsmith@liverpool.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | BACKGROUND: Doxazosin, an alpha1-adrenergic antagonist, inhibits sympathetic contraction of prostatic stromal smooth muscle cells and is used in the relief of obstructive benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). In vitro application of noradrenaline stimulates expression of cytoskeletal filaments, particularly actin and myosin, by prostatic stromal cells, thus enhancing their differentiation towards smooth muscle cells. This study examined the possible role of doxazosin in reversing this phenotypic modulation as well as in inhibiting smooth muscle cell contraction. METHODS: Stromal cell tissue cultures derived from 10 human hyperplastic prostates were rendered quiescent by reduction of stripped fetal calf serum (FCS) to 1% (v/v) in the medium followed by treatment with 20 microM noradrenaline and/or 1 microM doxazosin for 10 days. Doxazosin, in 10-fold increments of concentration, was also added, separately, to two of these cell cultures, which were either quiescent or growing in 10% normal (unstripped) FCS. Harvested cells were labelled with fluorescein-labelled antisera to smooth muscle cytoskeletal filaments, and their individual fluorescence levels were analyzed flow-cytometrically. RESULTS: Noradrenaline increased expression of all cytoskeletal filaments studied. This effect was greatest for actin and myosin in proliferating cell cultures. Doxazosin largely reversed the increase in filament expression. This effect was most significant for actin and myosin and greatest in quiescent cultures. However, inhibition of the agonist effect of noradrenaline by doxazosin showed no clear dose-related response, in that expression of cytoskeletal filaments was differentially inhibited. CONCLUSIONS: The data suggest that doxazosin may inhibit not only stromal contraction of differentiated smooth muscle cells in BPH but also the phenotypic modulation of stromal smooth muscle cell differentiation induced by noradrenaline. These actions, together, may render prostatic stroma less contractile, and hence less able to respond to sympathetic stimulation, in patients with BPH. While effects on isolated stromal cells are of undoubted importance, failure to demonstrate a consistent dose-response relationship between expression of smooth muscle cell phenotype and inhibition by doxazosin suggests that additional influences, including humoral factors as well as the proximity of differentiated epithelium, are also likely to be involved in this interaction in the intact tissue. |
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