We investigated the mechanisms by which androgens increase mean circulating GH concentrations in boys. We tested two hypotheses: 1) testosterone increases serum GH concentrations at least in part via an androgen receptor-mediated mechanism, rather than exclusively by way of aromatization to estrogen; 2) androgen augments one or more specific features to GH secretion (secretory burst number, amplitude, and/or duration) and/or prolongs the half-life of GH removal. To examine these hypotheses, prepubertal boys with constitutionally delayed development and/or growth were given injections of testosterone (100 mg monthly; n = 7) or treated with oral oxandrolone, a nonaromatizable androgen (1.25 mg twice daily; n = 5). Pulsatile GH release was studied before and during androgen administration by sampling blood at 20-min intervals for 24 h. The immunoreactive GH time series were subjected to a novel deconvolution technique, which revealed that 1) testosterone and oxandrolone each increased mean (24-h) serum GH concentrations significantly; 2) both androgens augmented the daily endogenous GH secretory rate significantly; 3) increased GH production resulted from a higher mass of GH secreted per burst and a higher maximal rate of GH secretion within each burst; and 4) androgens amplified the magnitude of the nyctohemeral rhythm in the mass (but not frequency) of GH secretory pulses. The observed effects of androgen were specific, since the number and duration of GH secretory bursts and the subject-specific GH half-life were unaltered by androgen treatment. We conclude that androgen acting apart from conversion to estrogen is capable of specifically activating the somatotropic axis via distinct neuroendocrine secretory mechanisms.
There is controversy regarding the role of the Trp64Arg variant of the beta3-adrenergic receptor (beta3AR) gene in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance. The modest effect of the variant as well as differences in study design, gender, age, and genetic background may contribute to divergent results among investigations. Insulin sensitivity (euglycemic clamp and tracers) was measured in 13 obese women (57 +/- 6 yr old) heterozygous for the beta3AR variant and in 14 women (57 +/- 4 yr old) homozygous for the normal gene. Groups were matched for age, body composition, intraabdominal fat, sc abdominal fat, physical activity level, and aerobic capacity. Exogenous glucose infusion during the clamp was significantly lower (P = 0.03) in beta3AR heterozygotes (241 +/- 135 mg/min) vs. normal homozygotes (379 +/- 172 mg/min). Basal endogenous glucose production was not different (P = 0.20) between heterozygotes (175 +/- 27 mg/min) and normal homozygotes (164 +/- 14 mg/min). Endogenous glucose production during hyperinsulinemia was also not different (P = 0.22) between heterozygotes (77 +/- 57 mg/min) and normal homozygotes (56 +/- 16 mg/min). Total glucose disposal adjusted for residual endogenous glucose production was lower (P = 0.049) for heterozygotes (320 +/- 111 mg/min) than for normal homozygotes (441 +/- 183 mg/min). Our results suggest that obese postmenopausal women who are heterozygous for the Trp64Arg variant in the beta3AR gene have greater insulin resistance than age-, body composition-, and physical activity-matched women homozygous for the normal gene.
The re-establishment of hypothalamic-opioid inhibitory activity involved in LH secretion in patients with anorexia nervosa during the phase of weight gain predicts imminent restoration of ovulatory cycles. Pituitary LH response to exogenous GnRH during weight recovery does not accurately predict the outcome of the disease regarding reinitiation of menstrual cycles; however, it might be an indicator that the normal function of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis is being restored.
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