Volume 13, Issue 9b pp. 3296-3302

Intracrine androgenic apparatus in human bone marrow stromal cells

Tarvo Sillat

Tarvo Sillat

Department of Medicine, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland

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Raimo Pöllänen

Raimo Pöllänen

Department of Medicine, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland

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Joana R.C. Lopes

Joana R.C. Lopes

Instituto de Medicina Molecular, Faculdade de Medicina, University of Lisbon, Portugal

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Pauliina Porola

Pauliina Porola

Department of Medicine, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland

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Guofeng Ma

Guofeng Ma

Department of Medicine, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland

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Matti Korhonen

Matti Korhonen

Hospital for Children and Adolescents, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Finland

Department of Anatomy, Biomedicum Helsinki, University of Helsinki, Finland

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Yrjö T. Konttinen

Corresponding Author

Yrjö T. Konttinen

Department of Medicine, Helsinki University Central Hospital, Helsinki, Finland

ORTON Orthopaedic Hospital of the Invalid Foundation, Helsinki, Finland

COXA Hospital for Joint Replacement, Tampere, Finland

Correspondence to: Yrjö T. KONTTINEN, Department of Medicine, Biomedicum, PO Box 700, FIN-00029 HUS, Finland.
Tel.: +358-9-191-25210
Fax: +358-9-191+25218
E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 29 January 2010
Citations: 14

Abstract

It was suggested that human mesenchymal stromal cells might contain an intracrine enzyme machinery potentially able to synthesize the cell’s own supply of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) from dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) pro-hormone produced in the adrenal cortex in the reticular zone, which is unique to primates. Indeed, 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3β-HSD) and 5α-reductase enzyme proteins were expressed in resting mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) in vitro. However, the ‘bridging’ enzymes 17β-HSDs, catalysing interconversion between 17β-ketosteroids and 17β-hydroxysteroids, were not found in resting MSCs, but 17β-HSD enzyme protein was induced in a dose-dependent manner by DHEA. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reactions disclosed that this was mainly due to induction of the isoform 5 catalysing this reaction in ‘forward’, androgen-bound direction (P < 0.01). This work demonstrates that the MSCs have an intracrine machinery to convert DHEA to DHT if and when challenged by DHEA. DHEA as substrate exerts a positive, feed-forward up-regulation on the 17β-hydroxy steroid dehydrogenase-5, which may imply that DHEA-DHT tailor-making in MSCs is subjected to chronobiological regulation.

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