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Endocrinology, doi:10.1210/endo-89-3-659
Endocrinology Vol. 89, No. 3 659-668
Copyright © 1971 by the Endocrine Society.
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Dihydrotestosterone Formation in Fetal Tissues of the Rabbit and Rat

JEAN D. WILSON1 and ILSE LASNITZKI2

Department of Internal Medicine, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas, Texas, and Strangeways Research Laboratory Cambridge, England

Abstract

The rate of conversion of testosterone- l,2-3H to dihydrotestosterone-3H has been measured in a variety of tissues in rabbit embryos from 17 days of development to 3 days following birth and in rat embryos from 15 days of gestation to 4 days after delivery. In the rabbit embryo dihydrotestosterone formation was rapid only in the urogenital sinus and urogenital tubercle of both sexes at the earliest stages studied and was not measurable in wolffian and mullerian ducts until after gender identification was easily demonstrable. A similar pattern of development was observed in the rat embryo. These findings suggest that the capacity to form dihydrotestosterone in urogenital sinus and tubercle is not the result of androgen action but rather an inherent or obligatory property of the tissue and may fulfill in part the function of an initial androgen receptor in these organs. In contrast, in the mullerian and wolffian ducts the ability to form dihydrotestosterone appears to be acquired after the initial stages of differentiation are complete and may actually be the result of hormonal action. (Endocrinology 89:659,1971)

Footnotes

1 Work perfomied in part during the tenure of a Career Development Award of the USPHS and in part as the recipient of a Traveling Fellowship of the Royal Society of Medicine Foundation, Inc.

2 Sir Halley Stewart Fellow.

Received March 18, 1971.




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