Labeled methyltrienelone was used to determine androgen receptor (AR) levels in cultured pubic skin fibroblasts in 40 infertile men with primary seminiferous tubule disorders and 18 normal men. LH pulse patterns and mean serum LH levels were also determined by blood sampling at 10-min intervals for 6 h. The infertile men and the normal men had similar mean receptor levels [mean, 28.1 +/- 2.0 (+/- SEM) and 24.8 +/- 1.8 fmol/mg protein, respectively]. However, 5 men with chromosomal disorders had a higher mean AR level (41.3 +/- 6.2 fmol/mg protein) than the normal men, and 5 of the remaining infertile men (14.2%) had receptor levels that were less than the minimum value in normal men. In men with idiopathic oligospermia, 19.0% had low receptor levels. Although mean serum FSH and testosterone levels were similar in the infertile men with low AR levels and in the normal men, mean LH levels were significantly elevated in this group (7.1 vs. 3.6 IU/L), the higher values being a result of increased LH pulse amplitude (mean, 5.6 vs. 2.8 IU/L). The LH-testosterone product (an index of androgen resistance) was also elevated in these men. When infertile men with low AR levels were matched with infertile men with normal receptor levels, the mean LH values were significantly elevated in the former, as was the LH-testosterone product. Testosterone values were similar in the two groups of men. After excluding subjects with chromosomal disorders, there were no significant correlations between AR levels and other indices of androgen action, such as semen volume, seminal fructose, or sex hormone-binding globulin levels. We conclude that AR levels are higher in patients with severe testicular failure associated with X-chromosome disorders. Also, AR defects were found in 19.0% of infertile men with idiopathic oligospermia. Finally, elevation of mean LH levels in men with seminiferous tubule disorders may reflect resistance to androgen action.
Androgen receptor binding of radiolabelled methyltrienolone (3H-R1881) was determined in cultured genital skin fibroblasts from 17 normal male controls and from 65 males with genital abnormalities. Analysis of the results was performed with patients grouped according to the predominant clinical features. Of 16 patients with complete male pseudohermaphroditism, 12 had androgen receptor (AR) deficiency, one had "receptor-positive" Testicular Feminization, and in three, alternative diagnoses were established (17 alpha hydroxylase deficiency; 20,22-desmolase deficiency; mixed gonadal dysgenesis). In contrast, only four of 16 patients investigated for ambiguous genitalia (phallus intermediate between male and female, perineal urethra) showed AR deficiency. Borderline or slightly low AR levels were found in each of four boys in whom the sole abnormality was micropenis. In 26 boys with penile hypospadias, however, only one had low AR. Very low levels of AR (levels comparable to those seen in complete Testicular Feminization) were found in two of three men with infertility associated with abnormally high serum testosterone levels.
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