Male Reproductive Physiology Flashcards
What is involved in the hypothalamic pituitary testicular axis?
What negative feedback occurs?
Hypothalamus: GnRH
Anterior pituitary: FSH, LH
Testes: testosterone, inhibin
Testosterone -> inhibits GnRH, LH
Inhibin and estradiol -> inhibit FSH, GnRH
What is the function of the hypothalamic pituitary testicular axis?
Phenotypic gender (embryogenesis)
Sexual maturation (puberty)
Testosterone production
Sperm production
What is androgen insensitivity syndrome?
Do they produce AMH?
XY individual but no testosterone receptors -> no development of male internal/external genitalia
Produce AMH -> no uterine tubes, uterus, or upper vagina
Phenotypic female with short vagina, labia, and clitoris, breasts
What is the main 80% component of testis?
What is their fx and what do they contain?
What is in the other 20%?
Seminiferous tubules
Produce sperm; Sertoli cells (supportive), spermatogonia (stem cells), spermatocyes (developing sperm)
CT/interstitial: Leydig cells that produce testosterone, mast cells, macrophages, nerves, blood vessels, lymph vessels
What stimulates the leydig cells?
What stimulates Sertoli cells?
LH
FSH
What are the exocrine fx of the Sertoli cells?
Secrete aqueous fluid into the lumen of seminiferous tubules -> sperm transport from tubules to epididymis
Produce androgen-binding protein (ABP) -> binds testosterone and concentrates it in the seminiferous tubules
What are the endocrine fx of the Sertoli cells?
Produce AMH: regress internal female genital ducts
Produce inhibin: inhibit FSH
Produce aromatase: converts testosterone -> estradiol-17B
What are the supportive fx of Sertoli cells?
Provide nutrients to differentiating sperm (transferrin, Fe, lactate)
Form tight junctions -> blood-tested barrier: prevents immune system from attacking developing sperm
What are the fx of leydig cells?
Synthesize and secrete testosterone
Can make cholesterol de novo or get it from circulation to make testosterone
What is the key to the hormonal changes at puberty and what does it cause?
Pulsatile GnRH secretion -> causes pulsatile FSH and LH secretion -> causes sex steroid hormone secretion (testosterone)
Continuous secretion of GnRH will not cause these changes (needs to be pulsatile)
What androgens play a role in the male reproductive system?
What do they bind to?
Testosterone, DHT
Bind to androgen receptors: DHT has a higher affinity than testosterone
These receptors are in reproductive and non-reproductive tissues
Describe the pathway of testosterone
Active androgen in most androgenic target tissues
Made in leydig cells -> travels to seminiferous tubules where it is absorbed by the peritubular capillaries and enters peripheral circulation
What does testosterone bind to in the seminiferous tubules?
In peripheral circulation?
(Steroid hormone so has to bind to proteins to travel)
Binds to androgen-binding protein (ABP) in seminiferous tubules -> concentrates testosterone
60% binds to sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) -> keeps testosterone inactive
38% Albumin -> weakly active testosterone
2% Free testosterone -> biologically active
When does testosterone production begin?
What are its actions?
7-8 weeks gestation
Initiate development of internal male genitalia (epididymis, vas deferens, seminal vesicles, penis, scrotum)
Later initiates decent of testes
Also important in spermatogenesis and regulation of gonadotropin secretion (negative feedback on GnRH and LH)
What are testosterone’s actions during puberty?
Growth spurt Closure of epiphyseal plates Acne Increased muscle mass Deepening of voice Body hair Baldness Libido Growth of penis and seminal vesicles Increased BMR Increased RBC
What are the actions of DHT during development?
During puberty?
External male genitalia (penis, scrotum, prostate)
Sebaceous gland activity (acne), prostate growth, male pattern baldness
What is benign prostatic hyperplasia?
How do you treat this?
Requires androgens especially DHT
Enlargement for periurethral prostate lobes that compares the urethra -> cause storage and voiding symptoms
Not premalignant
1st: alpha 1 antagonists to relax smooth muscle in the bladder neck and urethra
2nd: 5 alpha-reductase inhibitors (finasteride) that blocks conversion of testosterone to DHT (less DHT, smaller prostate)
Testosterone can be converted to ____ by aromatase in peripheral tissues and Sertoli cells.
What are the actions of this androgen?
Estradiols/Estrogens
Bone maturation, growth acceleration, breast growth, role in spermatogenesis