Abstract: | Steroidogenesis by subcellular fractions of adrenal cortex proper (C.P.) and special zone (S.Z.) of female possum (Trichosurus vulpecula) was studied. Mitochondrial, microsomal and cytosol cell fractions were incubated with appropriate substrates in the presence of an NADPH-generating system. The major products formed from [3H]progesterone and [3H]17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone by the microsomal fraction of the C.P. were 11-deoxycortisol and 11-deoxycorticosterone and 3 alpha (beta)-hydroxy-5 alpha-androstan-17-one by the S.Z. The mitochondrial fraction converted [3H]11-deoxycortisol to cortisol in yields twenty times higher by the C.P. than by the S.Z. and to 17 alpha, 20 beta,21-trihydroxy-4-pregn-3-one thirty times higher by the S.Z. The conversion of [3H]androstenedione to 11 beta-hydroxyandrostenedione by the C.P. was approximately double that of the S.Z., while 18-hydroxyandrostenedione (tentatively identified) formed the highest yield in both zones. Incubation of the same substrates with cytosol formed two 5 beta-pregnane and two 5 beta-androstane derivatives in total yields less than 5% by C.P. and greater than 60% by S.Z. Aromatase activity, estimated by the release of [3H2O] from [1 beta 3H]testosterone, in the adrenals of 8 possums, was in each experiment negligibly low. Determination of total enzyme activities in the two zones revealed that 11 beta, 18 and 21-hydroxylases were higher in the C.P., while 17 alpha-hydroxylase was higher in the S.Z. Similar results were obtained when the rates of formation of hydroxylated products were estimated in the presence of saturating amounts of substrates. Active 5 alpha- and 5 beta-reductases, C17-20-lyase and 3 alpha (beta) and 20 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases were found almost exclusively in the S.Z. We conclude that the S.Z. at lower levels of activity than the C.P. could contribute to the basal secretion of corticosteroids. In addition, the S.Z. has a high capacity to form C19 steroids and 5 alpha- and 5 beta-reduced steroids. The possible role of the S.Z. in possum is discussed. |