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  • Title: Binding of a 4-methyl-4-aza-steroid to 5 alpha-reductase of rat liver and prostate microsomes.
    Author: Liang T, Heiss CE, Ostrove S, Rasmusson GH, Cheung A.
    Journal: Endocrinology; 1983 Apr; 112(4):1460-8. PubMed ID: 6832056.
    Abstract:
    A tritium labeled 5 alpha-reductase inhibitor, [1,2-3H] 17 beta-N,N-diethylcarbamoyl-4-methyl-4-aza-5 alpha-androstan-3-one ([3H]4-MA), binds reversibly to a high affinity site (Kd, 6.5 nM) in liver microsomes from male rats. The binding requires a nicotinamide nucleotide coenzyme; NADH is at least 100 times less potent than NADPH, and NADP+, NAD+, flavin adenine dinucleotide, coenzyme A, and ADP are inactive. The relative potencies of 13 steroids as inhibitors of the binding of [3H]4-MA to liver microsomes correlate with their relative potencies as inhibitors of the conversion of [14C]testosterone to [14C]5 alpha-dihydrotestosterone by liver microsomes. Comparison of liver microsomes from mature female rats and microsomes from mature male rat liver, ventral prostate, spleen, kidney, and skeletal muscle shows that their NADPH-dependent [3H]4-MA binding capacities correlate with their levels of 5 alpha-reductase activity. These results suggest that [3H]4-MA binds specifically to 5 alpha-reductase in a NADPH-dependent manner. 5 alpha-Reductase was solubilized from liver microsomes with a detergent, Lubrol-WX, and the solubilized enzyme also binds [3H]4-MA. The relative potencies of 13 steroids as inhibitors of rat ventral prostate and liver 5 alpha-reductase are the same, strongly suggesting that the 5 alpha-reductases in the two tissues are the same.
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