Abstract
Aldosterone production occurs in the outer area of the adrenal cortex, the zona glomerulosa. The glucocortocoids cortisol and corticosterone, depending upon the species, are synthesized in the inner cortex, the zona fasciculata. Calf zona glomerulosa cells rapidly lose the ability to synthesize aldosterone when placed in primary culture unless they are incubated in the presence of the antioxidants butylated hydroxyanisol and selenous acid, the radioprotectant DMSO, and the cytochrome P-450 inhibitor metyrapone. In the presence of these additives, calf zona fasciculata cells in primary culture synthesize aldosterone at rates which can approach those from cells isolated from the zona glomerulosa. Calf zona glomerulosa and fasciculata cells both responded well to ACTH and angiotensin II, but the zona fasciculata cells respond very poorly compared to glomerulosa cells to increased potassium in the media. Rat zona fasciculata cells in primary culture under similar conditions did not synthesize aldesterone, suggesting that the regulation of the expression of the enzymes responsible for the biosynthesis of aldosterone in the two species is different. Two distinct cytochrome P-450 cDNAs which hydroxylate deoxycorticosterone at the 11β position have been described in the rat, human and mouse. Both cytochrome P-450 cDNAs have been cloned and expressed in non-steroidogenic cells, but only one is expressed in the zona glomerulosa and only this glomerulosa cytochrome P450 can further hydroxylate deoxycorticosterone to generate aldosterone. Two bovine adrenal cDNAs have been described with 11β-hydroxylase activity and their expression products in transiently transfected COS cells can convert deoxycorticosterone into aldosterone. Both enzymes are expressed in all zones of the adrenal cortex. Zonal regulation of aldosterone synthesis in the bovine adrenal gland may be due to an 11β-hydroxylase with aldosterone synthesizing capacity which has not yet been isolated. Alternatively, a single enzyme might be responsible for the several hydroxylations in the pathway between deoxycorticosterone and aldosterone and zonal synthesis might be controlled by unknown factors regulating the expression of C-18 hydroxylation. The incubation of zona fasciculata with antioxidants and metyrapone results in atypical expression of this activity by an unclear mechanism.
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More From: Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
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