Dihydrotestosterone binding by cultured human fibroblasts. Comparison of cells from control subjects and from patients with hereditary male pseudohermaphroditism due to androgen resistance. 1976

J E Griffin, and K Punyashthiti, and J D Wilson

Dihydrotestosterone binding was measured in culture fibroblasts from 14 control subjects and from 12 patients with five different types of hereditary male pseudohermaphroditism. Two assays of binding were used--an intact monolayer assay and density gradient centrifugation of cell extracts. In the intact monolayer assay of normal cells the uptake of [3H]dihydrotestosterone consisted of two components. The first was a high affinity component that exhibited saturation at approximately 1 nM dihydrotestosterone. The second was a low affinity component that was not saturable with concentrations of steroid up to 5 nM. Twice the number of high affinity binding sites were present in fibroblasts grown from genital skin (foreskin, labia majora, and scrotum) as from nongenital sites (37 vs. 14 fmol/mg protein). In the density gradient assay in 5-10% sucrose, the major peak of dihydrotestosterone binding was in the 8S region in low molarity buffer and in the 4S region in 0.5 M KCl. High affinity binding was normal in cells from two patients with familial incomplete male pseudohermaphroditism, type 2, an autosomal recessive defect in which dihydrotestosterone formation is deficient, and in cells from a patient with male pseudohermaphroditism due to 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase deficiency, an autosomal recessive defect of testosterone synthesis. High affinity binding was low by both methods in fibroblasts from five patients with complete testicular feminization. Furthermore, binding by both methods was also low in cells from three subjects with familial incomplete male pseudohermaphroditism, type 1, a presumed X-linked recessive disorder of androgen resistance, and in fibroblasts grown from a subject with the incomplete form of testicular feminization. The finding that dihydrotestosterone binding is abnormal in two forms of hereditary androgen resistance in addition to complete testicular feminization suggests either that these disorders are the result of allelic mutations affecting the function of the androgen-binding protein or that normal dihydrotestosterone binding requires the participation of more than one gene product.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007700 Kinetics The rate dynamics in chemical or physical systems.
D008297 Male Males
D011485 Protein Binding The process in which substances, either endogenous or exogenous, bind to proteins, peptides, enzymes, protein precursors, or allied compounds. Specific protein-binding measures are often used as assays in diagnostic assessments. Plasma Protein Binding Capacity,Binding, Protein
D011956 Receptors, Cell Surface Cell surface proteins that bind signalling molecules external to the cell with high affinity and convert this extracellular event into one or more intracellular signals that alter the behavior of the target cell (From Alberts, Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2nd ed, pp693-5). Cell surface receptors, unlike enzymes, do not chemically alter their ligands. Cell Surface Receptor,Cell Surface Receptors,Hormone Receptors, Cell Surface,Receptors, Endogenous Substances,Cell Surface Hormone Receptors,Endogenous Substances Receptors,Receptor, Cell Surface,Surface Receptor, Cell
D005260 Female Females
D005347 Fibroblasts Connective tissue cells which secrete an extracellular matrix rich in collagen and other macromolecules. Fibroblast
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D001665 Binding Sites The parts of a macromolecule that directly participate in its specific combination with another molecule. Combining Site,Binding Site,Combining Sites,Site, Binding,Site, Combining,Sites, Binding,Sites, Combining
D001667 Binding, Competitive The interaction of two or more substrates or ligands with the same binding site. The displacement of one by the other is used in quantitative and selective affinity measurements. Competitive Binding
D012734 Disorders of Sex Development In gonochoristic organisms, congenital conditions in which development of chromosomal, gonadal, or anatomical sex is atypical. Effects from exposure to abnormal levels of GONADAL HORMONES in the maternal environment, or disruption of the function of those hormones by ENDOCRINE DISRUPTORS are included. Disorders of Sexual Development,Sex Development Disorders,Sex Differentiation Disorders,Ambiguous Genitalia,Genital Ambiguity,Hermaphroditism,Intersex Conditions,Intersexuality,Pseudohermaphroditism,Sexual Development Disorders,Sexual Differentiation Disorders,Ambiguities, Genital,Ambiguity, Genital,Condition, Intersex,Conditions, Intersex,Differentiation Disorder, Sex,Differentiation Disorder, Sexual,Differentiation Disorders, Sex,Differentiation Disorders, Sexual,Disorder, Sex Differentiation,Disorder, Sexual Differentiation,Disorders, Sex Differentiation,Disorders, Sexual Differentiation,Genital Ambiguities,Genitalia, Ambiguous,Intersex Condition,Intersexualities,Sex Development Disorder,Sex Differentiation Disorder,Sexual Development Disorder,Sexual Differentiation Disorder

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