Hairloss Study Abstract: Inhibition of the activity of 'basic' 5 alpha-reductase (type 1) detected in DU 145 cells and expressed in insect cells.
Title
Inhibition of the activity of 'basic' 5 alpha-reductase (type 1) detected in DU 145
cells and expressed in insect cells.
Author
Délos S; Iehlé C; Martin PM; Raynaud JP
Address
Laboratoire de Cancérologie Expérimentale, Faculté de Medecine, Secteur Nord,
Marseille, France.
Source
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol, 48: 4, 1994 Mar, 347-52
Abstract
The purpose of this study was 2-fold: (1) to identify the 5 alpha-reductase (5 alpha-R)
isozyme(s) present in DU 145 cells, a human cell-line of low androgen sensitivity derived
from a cerebral metastasis of an epithelial prostate cancer; and (2) to compare the
inhibitory potencies of three compounds on the 'basic' 5 alpha-R isozyme expressed in a
baculovirus-directed insect cell system. Conversion of testosterone (T) into 5
alpha-dihydrotestosterone (DHT) in DU 145 cells was measured by HPLC coupled to a Flo-one
HP radioactivity detector. DU 145 cells exhibited 5 alpha-R activity (21 pmol DHT/min/mg
protein) at pH 7.4 which disappeared at pH 5.5 suggesting that, of the two genomically
distinct human isozymes identified so far, type 1 5 alpha-R is expressed in DU 145 cells.
This was confirmed by at least two observations: first, 5 alpha-R activity in DU 145 cells
was inhibited with much higher potency by 4-MA than by finasteride which is known to be a
very poor competitor of the 'basic' enzyme (IC50s = 2.8 +/- 0.2 and 264 +/- 55 nM,
respectively). Second, only the type 1 5 alpha-R cDNA and not type 2 5 alpha-R cDNA
hybridized with DU 145 RNA. A high potency differential was also recorded for the
inhibition of 'basic' type 1 5 alpha-R expressed in a baculovirus-directed-insect cell
system by these two compounds, 4-MA being considerably more active than finasteride (Ki =
8.4 +/- 2.3 and 330 +/- 9 nM, respectively). This inhibition was competitive. On the other
hand, inhibition by an n-hexane lipid/sterol extract of Serenoa repens (LSESr) was
non-competitive and, when expressed in terms of recommended therapeutic doses, was 3-fold
greater for LSESr than for finasteride. These studies suggest that LSESr might exert a
regulatory inhibitory activity due to its specific lipid/sterol composition.