Adrenal cortisol secretion is greater in female than male guinea-pigs and declines with maturation in animals of both sexes. In an attempt to determine the intra-adrenal mechanisms responsible for age and sex influences on corticosteroid output, adrenocortical enzyme activities were compared in sexually immature (3 weeks) and mature (17 weeks) animals. Adrenal mitochondrial protein concentration decreased with maturation in male and female guinea-pigs. 11β-Hydroxylase activity in adrenal mitochondria was also lower in mature than immature guinea-pigs but greater in males than females. Neither mitochondrial cytochrome P-450 concentration nor cholesterol side-chain cleavage activity varied with age or sex. Adrenal microsomal protein concentration and 21-hydroxylase activity were similar in male and female guinea-pigs of the same age but far greater in mature than immature animals. Microsomal cytochrome P-450 concentration was unaffected by age or sex. Adrenal Δ4-steroid (cortisol) hydrogenase activity increased with maturation in both male and female guinea-pigs and was higher in males than females. These observations indicate that cortisol secretion, as modified by age and sex, correlates closely with adrenal steroid reductive but not oxidative metabolism, suggesting that changes in Δ4-hydrogenase activity are responsible, at least in part, for the decline in adrenal secretion during maturation in guinea-pigs.
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