Developmental programming: Exposure to testosterone excess disrupts steroidal and metabolic environment in pregnant sheep

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Abstract

Gestational exposure to excess T leads to intrauterine growth restriction, low birth weight, and adult metabolic/reproductive disorders in female sheep. We hypothesized that as early mediators of such disruptions, gestational T disrupts steroidal and metabolic homeostasis in both the mother and fetus by both androgenic and metabolic pathways. Maternal blood samples were measured weekly for levels of insulin, glucose, and progesterone from four groups of animals: control; gestational T (twice weekly im injections of 100 mg of T propionate from d 30 to d 90 of gestation); T plus an androgen antagonist, flutamide (15 mg/k·d oral; T-Flutamide); and T plus the insulin sensitizer, rosiglitazone (0.11 mg/k·d oral; T-Rosi) (n = 10-12/group). On day 90 of gestation, maternal and umbilical cord samples were collected after a 48-hour fast from a subset (n = 6/group) for the measurement of steroids, free fatty acids, amino acids, and acylcarnitines. Gestational T decreased maternal progesterone levels by 36.5% (P

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Abi Salloum, B., Veiga-Lopez, A., Abbott, D. H., Burant, C. F., & Padmanabhan, V. (2015). Developmental programming: Exposure to testosterone excess disrupts steroidal and metabolic environment in pregnant sheep. Endocrinology, 156(6), 2323–2337. https://doi.org/10.1210/en.2014-2006

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