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Howard Hughes Medical Institute (J.G., J.P.D., N.H.), The Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10021; Center for Reproductive Biology (M.S.), Department of Genetics and Cell Biology, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164-4234
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Nathaniel Heintz, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Rockefeller University, 1230 York Avenue, New York, New York 10021.
The rat ventral prostate is an androgen-dependent organ that undergoes dramatic cell death upon removal of testosterone by surgical castration. Several well characterized criteria, such as nuclear condensation, organelle blebbing, and DNA fragmentation, have been used to demonstrate that most of this cell loss is due to programmed cell death, or apoptosis, of the secretory epithelial cells. In addition to changes in morphology, it is well known that cells undergoing apoptosis show alterations in gene expression, and it is widely assumed that many of these genes are directly involved in the mechanism of programmed cell death. Using poly A+ RNA derived from normal rat prostate as well as from the regressing prostates of castrated rats, we have used a PCR-based subtractive hybridization approach to generate complementary DNA (cDNA) libraries greatly enriched in cDNAs strongly regulated during rat prostate regression. Several hundred of the genes represented in these libraries appear to be strongly regulated during prostate regression and most of these are prostate specific. Sequence analysis indicates that up to 30% of these clones are similar or identical to genes of known function, approximately 20% are similar to expressed sequence tags (ESTs), and as many as 50% of these clones have not been characterized previously. Analysis of selected clones using in situ hybridization indicates that they are expressed specifically in prostate epithelial cells, and that certain of these clones are regulated temporally in a pattern consistent with apoptosis. The patterns of gene expression include: 1) genes whose expression decreases uniformly after removal of androgen, indicative of androgen sensitive genes; 2) genes whose expression increases in apoptotic prostate cells and in other tissues, suggesting a class of genes generally involved in apoptosis; 3) and genes whose expression increases in individual regressing prostate epithelial cells, suggesting a class of prostate specific genes associated with apoptosis.
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