Urology
Volume 72, Issue 1 , Pages 205-213, July 2008

Elevated Epithelial Expression of Interleukin-8 Correlates with Myofibroblast Reactive Stroma in Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia

Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas

Received 15 August 2006; accepted 12 November 2007. published online 04 March 2008.

Objectives

Numerous inflammatory diseases display elevated interleukin (IL)-8, and most are associated with a reactive stroma. IL-8 expression is also elevated in benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), yet little is known about reactive stroma in BPH. Whether a reactive stroma response exists in BPH, whether this correlates with elevated IL-8, and whether IL-8 can induce a reactive stroma phenotype have not been determined. This study was designed to specifically address these issues.

Methods

Normal prostate transition zone tissue and BPH specimens, as identified by the Baylor College of Medicine pathology department, were examined by quantitative immunohistochemistry to correlate IL-8, smooth muscle alpha-actin, vimentin, calponin, and tenascin-C. In addition, human prostate stromal cell cultures were used to evaluate the effect of IL-8 on the expression of reactive stroma biomarkers.

Results

BPH nodules exhibited elevated epithelial IL-8 immunoreactivity, and this correlated with elevated smooth muscle alpha-actin, reduced calponin, and altered deposition of tenascin-C, relative to the normal prostate transition zone tissue (P <0.05). Multiple vimentin-positive prostate stromal fibroblast cultures were induced by IL-8 to also co-express smooth muscle alpha-actin and tenascin-C, typical of a reactive stroma myofibroblast phenotype.

Conclusions

These data show that BPH reactive stroma is fundamentally different from normal prostate fibromuscular stroma and is typified by the emergence of a reactive stroma myofibroblast phenotype. This reactive stroma pattern correlated spatially with IL-8 elevation in adjacent epithelium. Additionally, IL-8 induced expression of myofibroblast markers in human prostate fibroblasts in vitro. These results suggest that IL-8 acts as a regulator of BPH reactive stroma and is therefore a potential therapeutic target.

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 J. A. Tuxhorn is currently at Wyle, 1290 Hercules Drive, Houston, TX 77058 and her contribution to this work occurred while she was a student at Baylor College of Medicine; this study was not sponsored by Wyle.

 This study was supported by National Institutes of Health Training grant 5-T32-HD07165, National Institutes of Health grants RO1-CA058093, RO1-DK045909, and UO1-CA84296.

PII: S0090-4295(07)02466-1

doi:10.1016/j.urology.2007.11.083

Urology
Volume 72, Issue 1 , Pages 205-213, July 2008