EFFECTS OF TAMOXIFEN ON PLASMA CONCENTRATIONS OF TESTOSTERONE AND GONADOTROPHINS IN THE MALE RAT
- 1 November 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Bioscientifica in Journal of Endocrinology
- Vol. 79 (2) , 239-240
- https://doi.org/10.1677/joe.0.0790239
Abstract
Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology, Shrewsbury, Massachusetts 01545, U.S.A. (Received 2% March 1978) Tamoxifen (trans 1-(p-β-dimethylaminoethoxyphenyl)-1,2-diphenylbut-1-ene; ICI 46,474) is both a potent antioestrogen and a weak oestrogen (Harper & Walpole, 1967) and is thought to act by inhibiting the binding of oestradiol to its cytoplasmic receptor (Jordan & Koerner, 1975). Chronic treatment with tamoxifen causes atrophy of the male accessory reproductive glands and the testicular germinal epithelium in the rat (Harper & Walpole, 1967) and the dog (M. Mason, unpublished data), as well as depression of the plasma concentration of testosterone in the latter species (M. Mason & A. Bartke, unpublished data). A direct inhibitory effect of tamoxifen on testicular steroidogenesis was suspected because treatment of female rats with tamoxifen increases, rather than decreases, the plasma concentration of luteinizing hormone (LH; Watson, Anderson, Alam, O'Grady & Heald, 1975). The possibility that an antioestrogen might act directly is of interest sinceThis publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- EFFECT OF NEONATAL ANDROGENIZATION ON LUTEINIZING HORMONE, FOLLICLE-STIMULATING HORMONE, PROLACTIN AND TESTOSTERONE LEVELS IN MALE RATSJournal of Endocrinology, 1977
- Effect of Testosterone Implants on Serum Gonadotropin Concentrations in the Male RatBiology of Reproduction, 1976