Benign prostatic hyperplasia nodules in patients treated with celecoxib and/or finasteride have reduced levels of NADH dehydrogenase [ubiquinone] iron‐sulfur protein 3, a mitochondrial protein essential for efficient function of the electron transport chain

Author:

Liu Teresa T.1,Igarashi Taro2ORCID,El‐Khoury Nathalie3,Ihejirika Nnamdi3,Paxton Kelsey3,Jaumotte Juliann3,Dhir Rajiv4,Hudson Chandler N.5,Nelson Joel B.2,DeFranco Donald B.36,Yoshimura Naoki23,Wang Zhou237,Pascal Laura E.37ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urology University of Wisconsin Madison Wisconsin USA

2. Department of Urology University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

3. Pharmacology and Chemical Biology University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

4. Department of Pathology University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

5. Division of Urology Southern Illinois University School of Medicine Springfield Illinois USA

6. Pittsburgh Institute for Neurodegenerative Diseases University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

7. UPMC Hillman Cancer Center University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundBenign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is a condition generally associated with advanced age in men that can be accompanied by bothersome lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) including intermittency, weak stream, straining, urgency, frequency, and incomplete bladder voiding. Pharmacotherapies for LUTS/BPH include alpha‐blockers, which relax prostatic and urethral smooth muscle and 5ɑ‐reductase inhibitors such as finasteride, which can block conversion of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone thereby reducing prostate volume. Celecoxib is a cyclooxygenase‐2 inhibitor that reduces inflammation and has shown some promise in reducing prostatic inflammation and alleviating LUTS for some men with histological BPH. However, finasteride and celecoxib can reduce mitochondrial function in some contexts, potentially impacting their efficacy for alleviating BPH‐associated LUTS.MethodsTo determine the impact of these pharmacotherapies on mitochondrial function in prostate tissues, we performed immunostaining of mitochondrial Complex I (CI) protein NADH dehydrogenase [ubiquinone] iron‐sulfur protein 3 (NDUFS3) and inflammatory cells on BPH specimens from patients naïve to treatment, or who were treated with celecoxib and/or finasteride for 28 days, as well as prostate tissues from male mice treated with celecoxib or vehicle control for 28 days. Quantification and statistical correlation analyses of immunostaining were performed.ResultsNDUFS3 immunostaining was decreased in BPH compared to normal adjacent prostate. Patients treated with celecoxib and/or finasteride had significantly decreased NDUFS3 in both BPH and normal tissues, and no change in inflammatory cell infiltration compared to untreated patients. Mice treated with celecoxib also displayed a significant decrease in NDUFS3 immunostaining and no change in inflammatory cell infiltration.ConclusionsThese findings suggest that celecoxib and/or finasteride are associated with an overall decrease in NDUFS3 levels in prostate tissues but do not impact the presence of inflammatory cells, suggesting a decline in mitochondrial CI function in the absence of enhanced inflammation. Given that BPH has recently been associated with increased prostatic mitochondrial dysfunction, celecoxib and/or finasteride may exacerbate existing mitochondrial dysfunction in some BPH patients thereby potentially limiting their overall efficacy in providing metabolic stability and symptom relief.

Publisher

Wiley

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