Abstract

FSH bioactivity was measured by means of FSH-dependent aromatase activity (conversion of androgen substrate to estradiol). Assay sensitivity was optimized by the use of immature (7-10 days old) rats as Sertoli cell donors, serum-free medium for incubation, phosphodiesterase inhibitor (methylisobutylxanthinine), serial dilution of FSH in medium containing 1% BSA, delayed addition of FSH for 72 h after cell plating, and 19-hydroxyandrostenedione (2.5 X 10(-6) M) as the aromatizable androgen substrate. The method consisted of subjecting the decapsulated immature rat testes to a 2-step collagenase dispersion, plating the cells in medium [Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium-Ham's F-10 (1:1)] containing growth factors and methylisobutylxanthinine for 72 h, adding increasing doses of FSH to the standard curve or small volumes of serum to the test vials as well as 19-hydroxyandrostenedione for 24 h, and measuring estradiol by RIA in dilutions of the medium. Using NIAMDD human (h) FSH-2 as the bioassay standard, the useful range of the assay was 0.01-5.0 ng/ml. Specificity was determined by the addition of graded doses of hLH, hTSH, ACTH, hGH, hPRL, and hCG. The minor degree of FSH bioactivity observed in a few hormone preparations was accounted for by the degree of FSH contamination in them. Mean intra- and interassay coefficients of variation were 9% and 11%, and the index of precision was 0.049. This bioassay was used to determine the bioactive FSH content of pituitary extracts, tissue culture media, elutions from columns, and isoelectrically focused samples. More importantly, small quantities of human sera gave responses parallel to the standard curve in a minimum of two dilutions. The bio- to immunoreactive ratios, expressed as the mean +/- SEM (NIAMDD-hFSH-2), were 0.66 +/- 0.2 in boys (n = 6), 0.78 +/- 0.2 in pubertal girls (n = 6), 1.18 +/- 0.2 in men (n = 13), 1.24 +/- 0.1 in postmenopausal women (n = 30), 1.94 +/- 0.3 in the follicular phase (n = 19), 6.2 +/- 1.4 in the ovulatory phase (n = 19), and 1.6 +/- 0.4 in the luteal phase (n = 19) of the normal menstrual cycle. These results indicate that the bio- to immunoreactive hFSH ratio in the circulation, is dependent upon the hormonal milieu of the subject.

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