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The control of adrenocortical secretion in the brush-tailed possum, Trichosurus vulpecula
Authors:G P Vinson
Institution:Department of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy, St. Bartholomew''s Medical College, Charterhouse Square, London EC1M 6BQ UK
Abstract:Circulating levels of corticosteroids and androgens have been studied in the brush-tailed possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) under conditions of tropic hormone stimulation. In both males and anestrous females, levels of androgen (considered to consist largely of testosterone) were elevated by 3 days of treatment with PMS. Further treatment with ACTH (Synacthen) subsequently reduced the level of testosterone in the females to values significantly below the control values, and in the male to a value intermediate between control and PMS stimulated levels. Levels of corticosteroid (considered to consist largely of cortisol) were unaffected by gonadotropin treatment, but significantly increased with ACTH. Dexamethasone treatment greatly decreased cortisol levels, but androgen levels were unaffected in both sexes.In vitro androgen production by the definitive adrenal cortex of the female was significantly decreased by dexamethasone pretreatment. Androgen production by a special hypertrophied adrenocortical zone was unaffected. Corticosteroid formation was reduced in both types of tissue.It is concluded that the adrenal cortex contributes to circulating testosterone levels in the female possum. This is supported by gonadotropin, whereas ACTH has a double effect of stimulating overall steroidogenesis, but switching the relative proportions of the steroids by decreasing the synthesis of androgen and stimulating the corticosteroid pathway. The possible physiological role for this phenomenon and the function of the special hypertrophied zone in the female adrenal cortex are discussed.
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