Intra-adrenal factors are not involved in the differential control of cortisol and adrenal androgens in human adrenals

The differential control of adrenal androgens and cortisol may be due to intra-adrenal factors, which may be age- or sex-related, or due to extra-adrenal factors, such as circulating hormones. The purpose of this study was to identify any intrinsic differences that may exist in steroidogenic product...

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Published inEuropean journal of endocrinology Vol. 138; no. 5; pp. 567 - 573
Main Authors FEARON, U, CLARKE, D, MCKENNA, T. J, CUNNINGHAM, S. K
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Colchester Portland Press 01.05.1998
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Summary:The differential control of adrenal androgens and cortisol may be due to intra-adrenal factors, which may be age- or sex-related, or due to extra-adrenal factors, such as circulating hormones. The purpose of this study was to identify any intrinsic differences that may exist in steroidogenic production occurring within adrenals obtained from males and females, and any maturational differences that may evolve with age. Using human adrenals from 48 transplant donors (32 males, 16 females; ages 5-60 years), the influences of age and sex on basal production of and ACTH-stimulated cortisol, androstenedione and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) were examined in freshly prepared adrenal cell suspensions. Basal and ACTH-stimulated cortisol, androstenedione and DHEA production were similar in adrenals from males and females and did not correlate significantly with age when the whole group was examined. When steroidogenesis in male and female adrenals was examined separately against age, a significant correlation was observed only for basal and ACTH-stimulated androstenedione in adrenals from males in the younger age group, 5-30 years (basal: r=0.84, P=0.0001; ACTH-stimulated: r=0.52, P=0.007). Examination of the relationships between the steroids disclosed that the basal and ACTH-stimulated cortisol/androgen ratios did not correlate significantly with age, but the androstenedione/DHEA ratio showed a significant direct relationship with age in males only (basal: r=0.53, P=0.006; ACTH-stimulated: r=0.5, P=0.01). These data suggest that the influences of sex and age are minor in the modulation of adrenal steroidogenesis and support the concept that extra-adrenal factors dominate in the differential modulation of adrenal androgens and cortisol. The relationship between the androstenedione/ DHEA ratio and increasing age in men is consistent with the recently reported stimulatory effect of testosterone on adrenal steroidogenesis by induction of the conversion of DHEA to androstenedione.
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ISSN:0804-4643
1479-683X
DOI:10.1530/eje.0.1380567