Testicular control of prostaglandin E2 production in rat vas deferens.
Orchidectomy decreased and testosterone (T) replacement restored prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) concentrations in adult rat vas deferens. To explain this finding, phospholipase A (PLase-A) and PG synthetic activity were studied in vas tissue from 9-week-old rats orchidectomized with or without T replacement as well as in rats in which the cauda epididymidis was ligated. PG synthetic activity fell to 3% of intact levels in 14-day castrate rats and was restored to normal by T replacement. Although vas PLase-A activity was also significantly (P less than 0.01) reduced to 38% of the control level in 14-day castrate rats, this change appears in part to reflect a castration-related increase in endogenous phospholipid concentrations. Further, T replacement only partially restored PLase-A activity to 59% of intact levels. Ligation of the cauda epididymidis in intact rats reduced vas PLase-A activity to castrate levels without altering vas T concentration. These results demonstrate both a direct effect of T on the biosynthesis of PGs in rat vas deferens as well as a paracrine effect, which appears to be mediated by a factor(s) other than T. These data suggest the existence of a new mechanism through which testicular products contribute to the function of the vas deferens.[1]References
- Testicular control of prostaglandin E2 production in rat vas deferens. Saito, H., Noguchi, K., Winters, S.J., Keeping, H.S., Oshima, H., Troen, P. Endocrinology (1986) [Pubmed]
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