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Regulation of androgen receptor mRNA and protein in the rat testis by testosterone

Authors :
Blok, L.J. (Leen)
Bartlett, J.M.S. (John)
Bolt-de Vries, J. (Joan)
Themmen, A.P.N. (Axel)
Brinkmann, A.O. (Albert)
Weinbauer, G.F. (G.)
Nieschlag, E. (Eberhard)
Grootegoed, J.A. (Anton)
Blok, L.J. (Leen)
Bartlett, J.M.S. (John)
Bolt-de Vries, J. (Joan)
Themmen, A.P.N. (Axel)
Brinkmann, A.O. (Albert)
Weinbauer, G.F. (G.)
Nieschlag, E. (Eberhard)
Grootegoed, J.A. (Anton)
Publication Year :
1991

Abstract

__Abstract__ Adult rats were treated with ethane dimethane sulphonate (EDS), an agent that destroys Leydig cells. Within 5 days after EDS treatment, the levels of testosterone (T) in the circulation and in the testis were decreased to very low values, which makes it possible to manipulate the testicular T concentration through administration of exogenous T. Spermatogenesis was not markedly affected within 5 days after EDS treatment, also not in the absence of T administration. In testes of EDS-treated rats, the androgen receptor mRNA (ARmRNA) level remained unaltered for 5 days. In ventral prostate, however, this treatment caused a pronounced upregulation of the level of ARmRNA, which could be counteracted by implantation of silastic T implants immediately after EDS treatment. In EDS-treated rats carrying a T implant and in untreated rats, the same number of specific [3H]R1881 binding sites was observed using a total testis nuclear fraction (Scatchard analysis). In testes from EDS-treated rats without T implants, androgen receptors (AR) did not fractionate into the nuclear fraction; however, the total testicular AR content in these animals (measured by nuclear [3H]R1881 binding after receptor transformation through injection of a high dose of T, 2 h before killing the rats) remained unaltered. Immunoprecipitation and Western blotting using anti N-terminal antibodies seemed to indicate that the total testicular amount of AR protein in the EDS-treated rats was very low as compared to that in EDS-treated rats carrying T implants and in untreated rats. Even after receptor retransformation (by injection of a high dose of T) the receptors were not quantitatively detected by immunoprecipitation and Western blotting. This may point to a structural modification of the AR that occurs in the prolonged absence of androgens.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology vol. 40 no. 1-3, pp. 343-347, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn929962808
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016.0960-0760(91)90200-O