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      Effect of GABA and benzodiazepines on testicular androgen production.

      Life Sciences
      Age Factors, Androgens, biosynthesis, Animals, Benzodiazepinones, pharmacology, Chorionic Gonadotropin, Male, Rats, Receptors, GABA-A, drug effects, Sexual Maturation, Testis, metabolism, gamma-Aminobutyric Acid

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          Abstract

          We have evaluated the effect of Ro5-4864, a selective probe to label peripheral type benzodiazepine receptor, on "in vitro" testicular androgen production. Decapsulated testes from adult rats showed a significant increase in the basal and hCG-stimulated testosterone secretion into the medium in response to 10(-5) M, 10(-6) M, and 10(-7) M Ro5-4864. In addition, we have studied the changes in testicular GABA content at three different ages and we found its highest concentration at 31 days of age. When we evaluated the effect of GABA on "in vitro" androgen production at different stages of gonadal maturation we observed that the highest concentration of GABA (10(-6) M) was able to modify the basal and hCG-stimulated androgen production from adult (60 days) and pubertal (45 days) testes. In addition, when prepubertal testes (31 days) were incubated under basal conditions, 10(-6) M GABA induced a significant increment of androstanediol production, while the stimulatory effect of hCG was reduced in the presence of the same GABA concentration. The present results suggest that GABA plays a physiological role in the regulation of rat testicular androgen production depending on the stage of sexual maturation.

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