Abstract

The effects of purified albumin species and albumin fragments (0.2–1% w/v) on short-term (4 h) steroid secretion by immature rat Leydig cells, in the presence of a maximally stimulating dose of luteinizing hormone (LH), were investigated. Human albumin and the peptic fragment (comprising residues 1–387) enhanced pregnenolone production in isolated rat Leydig cells, whereas chicken albumin and the tryptic fragment (comprising residues 198–585) were not active. This stimulatory effect of human albumin and the peptic fragment correlated with the potential of these proteins to undergo a pH-dependent neutral-to-base transition as measured by circular dichroism. The tryptic fragment and chicken albumin did not have the potential to undergo such a transition. The pH-dependent conformational changes of albumin and fragments thereof occurred in parallel with a change in the binding affinity for testosterone and pregnenolone. The fatty acid oleic acid and the drug suramin, only when present in a molar ligand-to-albumin ratio equal to or higher than 2, inhibited the albumin-mediated stimulation of steroid production. These data show that the stimulatory effects of albumin species on LH-induced Leydig cell pregnenolone production depend on their fatty acid content and correlate with the potential of these molecules to undergo conformational changes. It is unknown via which mechanisms albumin exerts its stimulatory effect, but the LH action through the cyclic AMP pathway seems not to be affected.

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