Abstract
Testosterone (T) exerts its actions in brain directly via androgen receptors or, after aromatization to estradiol, via estrogen receptors. Brain aromatase activity in teleost fish is 100†1000 times greater than in mammals and would be expected to significantly reduce the quantity of androgen available for receptor binding. Experiments were carried out on the goldfish Carassius auratus to determine if androgen receptors are present in teleost brain and whether their physicochemical properties reflect elevated aromatase. Cytosolic and nuclear extracts were assayed with the use of [3H]T and charcoal, Sephadex LH-20, or DNA-cellulose chromatography to separate bound and free steroids. Binding activity was saturable and had an equally high affinity for T and 5adihydrotestosterone (Kd, -2.4 × 10-9 M). Although mibolerone was a relatively weak competitor, the putative teleost androgen 11-ketotestosterone, methyltrienolone (R1881), estradiol, progesterone, and cortisol were poor ligands. Characteristics that distinguish this receptor from a steroid-binding protein in goldfish serum are the presence of binding activity in both nuclear and cytosolic extracts, a low rate of ligand-receptor dissociation, electrophoretic mobility, sedimentation properties in low us. high salt, and tissue distribution (forebrain â« pituitary ≫ mid-/hindbrain). DNA cellulose-adhering and nonadhering forms were detected, but these did not differ in other variables measured. Although goldfish androgen receptors resembled those of mammals in all important physicochemical characteristics, they were unusually abundant (5†68 pmol/g tissue) compared to levels in rat brain, but comparable to levels in prostate and other male sex hormone target organs. Moreover, there were seasonal variations in total receptors, with a peak at spawning (April) 4- to 5-fold higher than values in reproductively inactive fish (July/August). This temporal pattern and magnitude of change corresponded to previously reported changes in brain aromatase. Thus, both phylogenetic and physiological correlates point to a functional interdependence between androgen receptors and aromatase in the brain. These studies in goldfish indicate that brain androgen receptors have a long evolutionary history and have been highly conserved through the vertebrate series. © 1988 by The Endocrine Society.
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CITATION STYLE
Pasmanik, M., & Callard, G. V. (1988). A high abundance androgen receptor in goldfish brain: Characteristics and seasonal changes. Endocrinology, 123(2), 1162–1171. https://doi.org/10.1210/endo-123-2-1162
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