Savu L, Zouaghi H, Gérard H, Gérard A, Nunez EA. High-affinity binding of testosterone in serum from normal developing chick embryos and during the graft-versus-host reaction.
BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA 1986;
881:15-21. [PMID:
3947672 DOI:
10.1016/0304-4165(86)90091-7]
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Abstract
The sera of developing chicken embryos contain high-affinity, low-capacity protein binding sites for testosterone. The affinities remain constant throughout development, with mean values for the association constants of approx. 3.6 X 10(8) M-1 at 25 degrees C, whereas the concentration of sites varies markedly as a function of age: from approx. 2 nmol/g serum proteins in 11-day embryos, it rises to a peak of approx. 5-8 nmol at 14-16 days, then drops to approx. 2.6 nmol at 18 days and only 0.8-1 nmol in adults. Testosterone binding is inhibited by corticosterone, progesterone and dihydrotestosterone, and is little affected by estradiol. The testosterone and corticosterone binding properties of chicken sera show close similarities: parallel ontogenic patterns; constant ratios, throughout development, of the equilibrium binding parameters of the two steroids; mutual binding inhibition. The evidence strongly suggests that the two activities are associated, at least in part, with a common protein carrier(s). In growing embryos which undergo a graft-versus-host reaction, elicited by the graft of adult spleen tissue at 9 days of age, the testosterone and corticosterone binding activities are significantly decreased. This decrease is due to a fall in the number of sites, whereas association constants are not affected. This is the first high-affinity, saturable, testosterone-binding property to be described in an embryonic serum.
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