Boisselle A, Dionne F T, Tremblay R R
Can J Biochem. 1979 Jul;57(7):1042-6. doi: 10.1139/o79-131.
Some characteristics of the dorsal skin cytoplasmic androgen receptor (AR) have been studied in male rats. The affinity constant, the binding specificity, and the sedimentation profile of the receptor have been found to be similar to the rat prostate AR. The measurement of the number of binding sites in various hormonal conditions (deprivation) led to the conclusion that this receptor was largely occupied by endogeneous hormones from gonadal and (or) adrenal sources. Administration of spironolactone or canrenone to 7-day-castrated rats was accompanied by a rapid and drastic decrease of available binding sites. This diminution was ascribed to the competitive inhibition of canrenone, the active in vivo metabolite of spironolactone. It is postulated that the antiandrogenic action of spironolactone, at the skin level, is mediated by canrenone which inhibits the formation of specific testosterone and (or) 5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone receptor complex in cytoplasm and consequently in nuclei.