Feeding mice an arginine-deficient diet decreased plasma concentrations of arginine, citrulline and ornithine in the females and arginine in the males, abolishing the sexual dimorphic pattern of these amino acids found in mice fed the standard diet. In addition, the restriction of dietary arginine produced a marked decrease in body and renal weights as well as in the activity of renal ornithine decarboxylase, decreases that were gender dependent since they were observed exclusively in males. The fact that these changes were not associated with the decrease in the circulating levels of testosterone and that the dietary arginine restriction prevented the body weight gain induced by testosterone treatment of female mice fed the standard diet indicates that dietary arginine is required for the anabolic action of androgens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aminoacyl-imidazole dipeptides carnosine (beta-alanyl-L-histidine) and anserine (beta-alanyl-1-methyl-histidine) are present in relatively high concentrations in excitable tissues, such as muscle and nervous tissue. In the present study we describe the existence of a marked sexual dimorphism of carnosine and anserine in skeletal muscles of CD1 mice. In adult animals the concentrations of anserine were higher than those of carnosine in all skeletal muscles studied, and the content of aminoacyl-imidazole dipeptides was remarkably higher in males than in females.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have studied the influence of dietary arginine on tissue arginine content, and arginine metabolism in CD1 mice. Dietary arginine restriction produced by feeding mice with a low arginine diet (0.06%) produced a marked decrease in arginine concentrations in the plasma, skeletal muscle and kidney of female mice (72%, 67% and 54%, respectively) while in male mice the decreases were smaller (58% in blood and 18% in the skeletal muscle).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFComp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol
March 2003
Sexual dimorphism in potassium content was found in plasma, kidney, heart and skeletal muscle of CD1 mice. We observed that feeding mice with a K(+)-deficient diet had an uneven and gender-dependent effect on organ weight and tissue potassium concentrations. Treatment produced a marked decrease in plasma, pancreas and skeletal muscle K(+) levels in both sexes, and a reduction in kidney, liver and heart potassium concentrations in females.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe antihormone RU486 (mifepristone, 11beta-(4-dimethylaminophenyl)-17beta-hydroxy-17alpha-(prop- 1-ynyl)-estra-4,9-dien-3-one) is currently used in many endocrinological studies and in clinical practice as a contraceptive agent. The results presented here indicate that the synthetic steroid RU486 may interfere in determinations of testosterone and estradiol when using some commercial kits. Although the cross reactivity is low (0.
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