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Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) activity is governed by glucocorticoid negative feedback and the magnitude of this signal is determined, in part, by variations in plasma corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) capacity. Here, in gonadectomized male rats we examine the extent to which different testosterone replacement levels impact on CBG and HPA function. Compared with gonadectomized rats with low testosterone replacement ( approximately 2 ng/ml), plasma adrenocorticotropin and beta-endorphin/beta-lipotropin responses to restraint stress were reduced in gonadectomized rats with high testosterone replacement ( approximately 5 ng/ml). Plasma CBG levels also varied negatively as a function of testosterone concentration. Moreover, glucocorticoid receptor binding in the liver was elevated by higher testosterone replacement, suggesting that testosterone acts to enhance glucocorticoid suppression of CBG synthesis. Since pituitary intracellular CBG (or transcortin) is derived from plasma, this prompted us to examine whether transcortin binding was similarly responsive to different testosterone replacement levels. Transcortin binding was lower in gonadectomized rats with high plasma testosterone replacement ( approximately 7 ng/ml) than in gonadectomized rats with low testosterone replacement ( approximately 2 ng/ml). This testosterone-dependent decrease in pituitary transcortin was associated, in vitro, with an enhanced nuclear uptake of corticosterone. These findings indicate that the inhibitory effects of testosterone on corticotrope responses to stress may be linked to decrements in plasma and intrapituitary CBG. This could permit greater access of corticosterone to its receptors and enhance glucocorticoid feedback regulation of ACTH release and/or proopiomelanocortin processing.