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  • Title: Evidence for sex-dependent anabolic response to androgenic steroids mediated by muscle glucocorticoid receptors in the rat.
    Author: Danhaive PA, Rousseau GG.
    Journal: J Steroid Biochem; 1988 Jun; 29(6):575-81. PubMed ID: 3386225.
    Abstract:
    The muscle anabolic/anti-catabolic activity of the androgenic steroids testosterone and trenbolone was studied in rats to investigate whether such steroids act as agonists via muscle androgen receptors, or as antagonists that oppose the catabolic effects of endogenous glucocorticoids via their interaction with muscle glucocorticoid receptors. For comparison, the effects of the potent glucocorticoid antagonist RU486 were also examined. The parameters measured included growth rate, muscle weight, serum growth hormone and corticosterone levels, and receptor binding parameters in muscle cytosol. Females responded better than males to anabolic treatment with the androgenic steroids. Ovariectomy or adrenalectomy abolished this response. Neither the sex difference nor the requirement for ovaries or adrenals could be explained in terms of muscle receptor parameters or serum growth hormone levels. The muscle anabolic activity of androgenic steroids was restored when castrated males were treated with oestradiol and when adrenalectomized females were treated with corticosterone. RU486 also prevented the catabolic/anti-anabolic activity of exogenous corticosterone in adrenalectomized rats. Testosterone and RU486 behaved as anti-glucocorticoids in vivo since they inhibited glucocorticoid-induced liver tyrosine aminotransferase activity. The results suggest that anabolic steroids can act via muscle glucocorticoid receptors, thereby antagonizing the catabolic activity of endogenous glucocorticoids, rather than via muscle androgen receptors.
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