Annual Variations in Plasma Sex Steroid-binding Protein and Testosterone Concentrations in the Adult Male Little Brown Bat: Relation to the Asynchronous Recrudescence of the Testis and Accessory Reproductive Organs1
- 1 December 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Biology of Reproduction
- Vol. 33 (5) , 1126-1137
- https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod33.5.1126
Abstract
The annual reproductive cycle of the male little brown bat, in contrast to seasonal reproductive patterns of other mammals, is differentiated by an asynchronous recrudescence of the testis and the accessory reproductive glands. Spermatogenesis occurs during the summer, whereas fully stimulated accessory organs, stored epididymal spermatozoa, and sexual behavior are expressed later during a mating period that extends, albeit interrupted by hibernation, from late summer until early spring. To investigate whether changes in high affinity androgen-binding activity in the circulation are related to the delayed renewal of the accessory organs, plasma sex steroid-binding protein (SBP) and total testosterone (T) levels were measured throughout the year. From these data and determinations of association constants for T binding to SBP and albumin at both hibernating (4.degree. C) and active (40.degree. C) temperatures, estimates of the unbound ("free") and albumin-bound T fractions were made and correlated with changes in the accessory reproductive organs. Plasma SBP concentrations (mean .+-. SEM) exhibited wide seasonal fluctuations: they were baseline in May (10 .+-. 2 nM) following spring arousal, increased dramatically in June (184 .+-. 24 nM), and reached peak levels in early July (262 .+-. 29 nM), where they remained until August. In late August they began to fall (104 .+-. 23 nM) and then returned to baseline during the hibernation period (October-April). Although total T levels were also elevated in June, it appeared that the unbound ("free") and the unbound plus albumin-bound T fractions did not increase until late July. Since the accessory gland weights did not begin to increase until late July as well, it was concluded that increases in the unbound and albumin-bound T fractions may be an important factor in the recrudescence of the accessories and that increased SBP activity in early summer may play a role in the regression and delayed renewal of these organs. However, what factor(s) maintain the accessory glands, epididymal spermatozoa, and sexual behavior during the breeding and hibernation periods when all T fractions were low are, as yet, undetermined.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
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