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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Testosterone in the Fetal Rat Testis

TLDR
Testes of fetal rats possess the enzymes necessary for converting radioactive acetate to radioactive testosterone as early as 15.5 days of intrauterine life, and the fetal testis is capable of formation do novo of testosterone through the period of sexual differentiation of the internal genitalia.
Abstract
Testes of fetal rats possess the enzymes necessary for converting radioactive acetate to radioactive testosterone as early as 15.5 days of intrauterine life. The fetal testis is, therefore, capable of formation do novo of testosterone through the period of sexual differentiation of the internal genitalia. Testosterone was measured in testicular tissue of fetal rats. Values ranged from as low as 0.09 ng/mg at 15.5 days of gestation to 2.76 ng/mg at 18.5 days of gestation. The sharp rise at 18.5 days of fetal age coincides with morphological evidence that relatively large amounts of testosterone are necessary for Wolifian duct stabilization at this time. Fetal testes were also incubated with [‘4C] acetate or [‘H] pregnenolone. Whereas conversion of both substrates to radioactive testosterone occurred at 15.5 and 16.5 days of gestation, no such conversion was evident at 14.5 days of fetal age with either substrate. Nonradioactive testosterone was, however, measurable in incubation from all three time periods. Neither radioactive nor nonradioactive testosterone was detectable in incubations of fetal ovaries with radioactive acetate or pregnenolone at 15 to 20 days of gestation. The influence of steroid androgens on

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Journal ArticleDOI

Plasma testosterone and progesterone titers of pregnant rats, their male and female fetuses, and neonatal offspring.

TL;DR: Day 18 and possibly day 19 post conception represent a critical period during which the central nervous system of the male is primed by high levels of testosterone, and the process of masculinization is completed by exposure to testosterone levels that are relatively low and need not be consistently higher than those of female littermates.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of brain aromatase cytochrome P450

TL;DR: It is clear that molecular mechanism(s) account for the diverse expression of aromatase in different neural tissue sites and during various physiological states or developmental periods and further study is necessary in order to understand the significance of the regulation of local estrogen biosynthesis by the arom atase cytochrome P450 gene during prenatal and postnatal development.
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Androgen Receptor Roles in Spermatogenesis and Fertility: Lessons from Testicular Cell-Specific Androgen Receptor Knockout Mice

TL;DR: This review tries to clarify the useful information regarding how androgen/AR functions in individual cells of the testis by comparing the results of cell-specific AR knockout in germ cells, peritubular myoid cells, Leydig cells, and Sertoli cells mouse models that were generated by different laboratories to see the consequent defects in spermatogenesis due to AR loss in different testicular cell types in s permatogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sexual dimorphism in the vertebrate nervous system.

TL;DR: Progress in the understanding of how neural sex differences arise is discussed, with the twin hopes of identifying those issues that remain unanswered or unaddressed and of convincing readers that the answers to these questions will shed light on the neurosciences beyond the field of sexual differentiation itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developmental changes in testicular gonadotropin receptors: plasma gonadotropins and plasma testosterone in the rat.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the early development of testicular FSH receptors in followed by a prominent rise in plasma FSH, with concomitant increases in testicular growth and LH receptor concentration, is an important factor in sexual maturation in the male rat.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and Function of Rat Testis Through Pubescence

TL;DR: The histology, histochemistry, testosterone content and secretion of the rat testis were studied from 20 to 90 days of age and the disappearance of Leydig cell perinuclear basophilia was correlated with increasing Leydigs cell function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of progesterone in human peripheral blood using gas-liquid chromatography with electron capture detection.

TL;DR: A method for the estimation of testosterone in human peripheral plasma using sensitive electron capture detection after gas-liquid chromatography of testosterone chloroacetate and the presence of 0.001 μg pure testosterone chlorOacetate can be demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plasma progesterone concentrations during pregnancy and lactation in the rat

Lee J. Grota, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1967 - 
TL;DR: Progesterone concentration was found to decrease before parturition and to increase again during lactation and a maximal post-partum concentration of this hormone was found during the 4th day of lactation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Levels of testosterone, androstenedione, estrone and estradiol-17 beta in the testes of fetal sheep.

Attal Ja
- 01 Aug 1969 - 
TL;DR: Testosterone, androstenedione, estrone and estradiol-17β were determined in the testes of fetal sheep ranging in age from 30 to 132 days of intrauterine life and Detectable amounts of estrone were present in 70-day-old testes.
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