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Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Vol 77, 1220-1226, Copyright © 1993 by Endocrine Society


ARTICLES

Anti-mullerian hormone and testosterone serum levels are inversely during normal and precocious pubertal development

R Rey, I Lordereau-Richard, JC Carel, P Barbet, RL Cate, M Roger, JL Chaussain and N Josso
Unite de Recherches sur l'Endocrinologie du Developpement (INSERM), Ecole Normale Superieure, Montrouge, France.

Anti-Mullerian hormone (AMH), also called Mullerian inhibiting substance or factor, is produced by Sertoli cells from fetal life until puberty. In the present study, AMH, testosterone (T), LH, and FSH were measured by immunochemical methods in the serum of 50 boys with normal or delayed pubertal development, 4 patients with suspected androgen insensitivity, and 11 patients with either central (CPP) or gonadotropin-independent (GIPP) precocious puberty to investigate the hormonal regulatory mechanisms of AMH secretion at puberty. An inverse relationship between AMH and T levels was demonstrated. In boys with normal or delayed puberty with T concentrations below 6.7 nmol/L, AMH values were elevated (mean +/- SEM, 22.4 +/- 3.1 micrograms/L) and widely dispersed. In subjects with T levels over 6.7 nmol/L, AMH levels were uniformly low (3.4 +/- 0.5 micrograms/L), except in patients with suspected androgen insensitivity. No significant relationship was found between AMH and gonadotropin levels. Similar results were obtained in patients with either CPP or GIPP. Longitudinal studies were performed on four boys with CPP and two with GIPP before and after treatment. At the time of diagnosis, the T concentration was high, and AMH levels were usually low in CPP and GIPP patients alike. When appropriate treatment was initiated, the T concentration was normalized within 2-4 weeks, but restoration of prepubertal AMH levels required several months. Mature Sertoli cells were observed in testicular biopsies performed in three patients with untreated GIPP. Our results suggest that gonadotropins are not directly implicated in repression of AMH synthesis at puberty, but, rather, that the decrease in AMH production is the consequence of an androgen-mediated, long term, reversible chain of events leading to morphological and functional maturation of the Sertoli cells. Thus, the fall in serum AMH levels appears to be an excellent marker of Sertoli cell pubertal development.


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