Impact of sex, androgens, and prostate size on C57BL/6J mouse urinary physiology: urethral histology

Author:

Ruetten Hannah12ORCID,Wegner Kyle A.23,Kennedy Conner L.23,Turco Anne23,Zhang Helen L.12,Wang Peiqing124,Sandhu Jaskiran12,Sandhu Simran12,Morkrid Jacquelyn1,Wang Zunyi24,Macoska Jill25ORCID,Peterson Richard E.6,Bjorling Dale E.24,Ricke William A.237ORCID,Marker Paul C.26,Vezina Chad M.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Comparative Biosciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

2. University of Wisconsin-Madison/UMASS Boston George M. O’Brien Center for Benign Urologic Research, Madison, Wisconsin, and Boston, Massachusetts

3. Molecular and Environmental Toxicology Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

4. Department of Surgical Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

5. Center for Personalized Cancer Therapy, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, Massachusetts

6. Division of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

7. Department of Urology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

Abstract

The National Institutes of Health leveled new focus on sex as a biological variable with the goal of understanding sex-specific differences in health and physiology. We previously published a functional assessment of the impact of sex, androgens, and prostate size on C57BL/6J mouse urinary physiology (Ruetten H, Wegner KA, Zhang HL, Wang P, Sandhu J, Sandhu S, Mueller B, Wang Z, Macoska J, Peterson RE, Bjorling DE, Ricke WA, Marker PC, Vezina CM. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 317: F996–F1009, 2019). Here, we measured and compared five characteristics of urethral histology (urethral lumen diameter and area, epithelial cell count, epithelial and rhabdosphincter thickness, epithelial cell area, and total urethral area) in male and female 9-wk-old C57BL/6J mice using hematoxylin and eosin staining. We also compared male mice with castrated male mice, male and female mice treated with the steroid 5α-reductase inhibitor finasteride or testosterone, or male mice harboring alleles ( Pbsn4cre/+; R26RDta/+) that reduce prostate lobe mass. The three methods used to reduce prostate mass (castration, finasteride, and Pbsn4cre/+; R26RDta/+) changed urethral histology, but none feminized male urethral histology (increased urethral epithelial area). Exogenous testosterone caused increased epithelial cell count in intact females but did not masculinize female urethral histology (decrease epithelial area). Our results lay a critical foundation for future studies as we begin to parse out the influence of hormones and cellular morphology on male and female urinary function.

Funder

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology

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