Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Adrenarche: A Survey of Rodents, Domestic Animals, and Primates

322

Citations

17

References

1978

Year

TLDR

The study measured adrenal steroid concentrations before and after sexual maturation in rodents, domestic animals, and primates to determine whether they exhibit an adrenarche comparable to humans. Only rabbits and dogs showed post‑maturation increases in DHA and DHAS, rhesus monkeys did not, while chimpanzees displayed a significant rise in all three steroids beginning at age five—preceding gonadal steroids—demonstrating a human‑like adrenarche.

Abstract

The concentrations of the adrenal steroids dehydroepiandrosterone (DHA), dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHAS), and delta 4-androstenedione (delta 4-A) have been measured by RIA before and after sexual maturation in plasma of rodents, domestic animals, and primates to determine whether these species exhibit and adrenarchal process comparable to man. The average concentrations of DHA and DHAS were less than 60 ng/dl and 5 microgram/dl, respectively, in plasma of sexually mature rodents and domestic animals, and a significant increase in the plasma DHA level after sexual maturation was seen only in the rabbit and dog. The concentrations of DHA, DHAS, and delta 4-A in 21 rhesus monekeys from 0-3 yr of age were 2021 +/- 235 ng/dl (mean +/- SE), 357 +/- 60 microgram/dl, and 107 +/- 9 ng/dl, respectively, and did not increase during sexual maturation. By contrast, DHA, DHAS, and delta 4-A levels in plasma of chimpanzees were 5.9-fold, 3.3-fold, and 4.8-fold greater, respectively, in 7- to 22-compared to 0- to 3-yr-old animals. Temporally, the increase in DHA levels in the chimpanzee is apparent at 5 yr and this precedes the increase in gonadal steroids, as is characteristic of human adrenarche. It is apparent that adrenal androgen levels and their developmental patterns differ markedly among species, and that among the species examined, only the chimpanzee exhibits an adrenarche comparable to that of man.

References

YearCitations

Page 1