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Inhibins in childhood and puberty
Authors:Raivio Taneli  Dunkel Leo
Affiliation:Biomedicum Helsinki, Institute of Biomedicine/Physiology, University of Helsinki, PO Box 63 (Haartmaninkatu 8), FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
Abstract:Inhibin is a heterodimeric glycoprotein that consists of an alpha-subunit linked to either a betaA subunit (inhibin A) or to a betaB subunit (inhibin B) and it exists in at least six different isoforms. These isoforms can not be measured separately by immunoassays. In boys, serum inhibin B levels change in concert with the increase in gonadotrophins. Associated with the postnatal activation of gonadotrophin secretion, the early inhibin B secretion is sustained until the age of 18-24 months; thereafter serum concentrations subside. In boys, between Tanner stages G1 and G2, serum inhibin B concentration again increases, but then plateaus. Inhibin A levels in human males are below the detection limit, but in girls, during the postnatal activation of gonadotrophin secretion, both serum inhibin A and inhibin B concentrations are measurable. Serum inhibin B levels correlate positively with age several years before the clinical onset of puberty, suggesting increasing follicular activity in late prepuberty. During female puberty, the inhibin B level increases from Tanner stage B1 through stage B3, suggesting high follicular activity before the development of ovulatory menstrual cycles, but serum inhibin A levels become measurable later in puberty, in agreement with the idea that inhibin A is mainly produced by the corpus luteum.
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