Wilson S C, Oakey R E, Scott J S
Department of Chemical Pathology, University of Leeds, England.
J Steroid Biochem. 1988 Jun;29(6):649-55. doi: 10.1016/0022-4731(88)90165-3.
For purposes of establishing suitable controls in studies of patients with a suspected enzyme deficiency, activities of enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of testosterone were compared in testes of patients with androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS) and normally differentiated males with carcinoma of the prostate (Ca prostate) or testis (Ca testis). Activities of 17,20-desmolase and of 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3 beta-HSD) were higher in the testes of pre-, peri- or postpubertal patients with AIS than in elderly men (58-80 yr) with Ca prostate. Activities of 17 beta-HSD (reductive direction) and 3 beta-HSD tended to be higher in peri- or postpubertal than in prepubertal patients with AIS. Activity of 3 beta-HSD was low in the patient with Ca testis. In a peripubertal (12 yr) patient with incomplete masculinization due to a severe deficiency of 17 beta-HSD, reductive activity of 17 beta-HSD was very low compared with that of patients with Ca prostate, Ca testis or AIS. In contrast, in testes from the younger sibling (4 yr), in whom the deficiency of 17 beta-HSD was less severe, 17 beta-HSD reduction of dehydroepiandrosterone was as high as that of men with Ca prostate, yet deficient in comparison with that of more closely age-matched patients with AIS. This emphasizes the desirability of using age-matched tissue for control purposes in enzyme studies.