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Intrinsic Regional Differences in Androgen Receptors and Dihydrotestosterone Metabolism in Human Preadipocytes
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2002
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GynecologyAndrogen ReceptorsAndrogen Receptor ComplementReproductive BiologyAdipokinesCentral ObesityObesityMetabolic SyndromeHuman MetabolismSteroid MetabolismHealth SciencesBiochemistryEndocrine MechanismHormonal ReceptorEndocrinologyPharmacologyHuman PreadipocytesPhysiologyMetabolic RegulationIntrinsic Regional DifferencesMetabolismMedicineReproductive Hormone
Androgens play an important role in regulating the central obesity that is a strong risk factor for cardiovascular disease and insulin resistance. This study confirms that androgen receptors are present in subcultured human preadipocytes, with androgen receptor gene expression and saturable specific dihydrotestosterone binding, dissociation constant 1.02 - 2.56 nM and maximal binding capacity 30.8 - 55.7 fmol/mg protein. There was an intrinsic regional difference in androgen receptor complement, with more androgen receptors in visceral than in subcutaneous preadipocytes. Dihydrotestosterone was metabolised by human preadipocytes, with more androstanediol produced by subcutaneous than visceral preadipocytes. While dihydrotestosterone metabolism was insufficient to explain the regional variation in androgen binding, both of these differences would reduce the androgen responsiveness of the subcutaneous preadipocytes compared with visceral preadipocytes. There were no gender differences in androgen binding or metabolism. While the direct effects of androgens on human PAs remain uncertain, these regional differences suggest that AR-mediated regulation of certain PA functions influences adipose tissue distribution.