The effect of spermatogenic disruption on the ability of testicular fluid to stimulate androgen production by normal Leydig cells
Reports from this and other laboratories have concluded that unilateral disruption of spermatogenesis induces a predominantly ipsilateral increase in the responsiveness of Leydig cells to stimulation with luteinizing hormone (LH) and have suggested that if such effects were mediated by locally produ...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Biology of reproduction 1987-05, Vol.36 (4), p.807-815 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Reports from this and other laboratories have concluded that unilateral disruption of spermatogenesis induces a predominantly
ipsilateral increase in the responsiveness of Leydig cells to stimulation with luteinizing hormone (LH) and have suggested
that if such effects were mediated by locally produced hormones then such "factors" should be detectable in testicular interstitial
fluid. We sought to demonstrate such factors in testicular fluid from gonads subjected to a variety of treatments that disrupt
gametogenesis. Fluid (TF) was drained from testes of adult rats that had been sham treated, irradiated, or treated with busulfan
in utero, made unilaterally or bilaterally cryptorchid, or were unilaterally or bilaterally efferent-duct-ligated. Leydig
cells obtained from normal rats basally produced 8 +/- 1 ng androgen/10(6) Leydig cells/2 h and, when maximally stimulated
with LH, produced 66 +/- 3 ng. The addition of the various TFs to the incubations significantly increased both basal and LH-stimulated
androgen production. TF from lesioned testes was more effective in increasing androgen production than TF from control rats.
Unilateral lesions caused an increase in the ability of TF from the disrupted testes to increase the androgen production by
normal Leydig cells, as compared to TF from contralateral testes. Thus, locally produced "factor(s)" do appear to modify Leydig
cell function. Additional studies using TF from control and bilaterally cryptorchid animals suggest that the "factor'' in
TF is heat-labile; has a molecular size between bovine serum albumin and ovalbumin; exerts a portion of its action independently
of cAMP formation; and does not appear to be LH, follicle-stimulating hormone, prolactin, or gonadotropin-releasing hormone. |
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ISSN: | 0006-3363 1529-7268 |
DOI: | 10.1095/biolreprod36.4.807 |