INVESTIGADORES
BERGADÁ Ignacio
artículos
Título:
Role of inhibins in childhood and puberty
Autor/es:
BERGADÁ I; BERGADÁ C; CAMPO SM
Revista:
JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC ENDOCRINOLOGY
Editorial:
FREUND PUBLISHING HOUSE LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Londres; Año: 2001
ISSN:
0334-018X
Resumen:
Inhibins, produced mainly in the gonads, suppress FSH synthesis. The bioactive dimeric forms of inhibin (A and B) have been proposed as peripheral markers of Sertoli and granulosa cell function. The determination of serum dimeric inhibins from birth through adulthood reflects a distinct pattern of both inhibins in males and females. Concomitantly with the gonadotrophin surge, an important production of inhibin B is observed during the first months of life. In males, inhibin B levels are higher than in females and persist elevated up to childhood, whereas in females they decrease up to pre-pubertal levels by 6 months of age. In girls, high serum levels of inhibin A are observed during the first two months of life; thereafter, they are undetectable until puberty. An active secretion of inhibin B persists in both males and females in the period of maximal LHRH pulse generator restraint; however, the possible gonadotrophin dependence of this production remains controversial. At puberty, a progressive rise in serum inhibin B occurs concomitantly with the increased production of sex steroids in both males and females. A similar secretion pattern of inhibin A is observed in girls. This increment is mainly exerted by gonadotrophins and modulated by multiple paracrine/autocrine mechanisms within the ovary and the testis that regulate the dimerization of the inhibin subunits throughout pubertal maturation. The differences observed in males and females between circulating dimeric inhibins in relation to gonadotrophins and sex steroid concentrations from birth through puberty has opened a new perspective for research in human reproduction. These new markers may contribute to a better knowledge of the regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis function and the physiopathology of the mechanisms involved in sexual differentiation and/or fertility disorders.