Steroid fatty acid esters in adrenals and plasma: effects of ACTH
- 1 December 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Journal of Endocrinology
- Vol. 127 (3) , 505-511
- https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.1270505
Abstract
The presence and production of 5-ene-steroid fatty acid esters (SFA) has been previously reported in bovine adrenals. A study was conducted, using a series of chromatographic procedures and radioimmunoassays, to determine the levels of SFA in adrenals from man, cattle, dog, rat and guinea-pig, and to assess, in both rats and guinea-pigs, the effect of ACTH on SFA production by adrenals and their subsequent secretion into the circulation. The effects of ACTH on plasma SFA and non-conjugated steroid levels were also investigated in human subjects. Our data indicated that adrenal pregnenolone fatty acid ester (PREG-FA) levels were below 40% of PREG levels in cattle, dog, rat and guinea-pig while, in man, PREG-FA levels were threefold those of PREG. A large proportion of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) and 5-androstene-3β,17β-diol were present as fatty acid ester derivatives in the adrenals of all species, with the exception of cattle. In both rats and guineapigs, administration of ACTH caused a sharp increase in adrenal PREG of approximately threefold which lasted for 6 h, while the concentration of adrenal PREG-FA was slightly increased for a short time. In plasma, however, a marked rise in PREG-FA occurred, while the changes in PREG levels were much lower than those of its acylated counterpart. In man, PREG and DHEA concentrations were rapidly stimulated two-fold in the first 30 min following the administration of ACTH, while PREG-FA and DHEA-FA levels were increased by approximately 2·5-fold (PJournal of Endocrinology (1990) 127, 505–511Keywords
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