pubmed-article:10469997 | pubmed:abstractText | Previous studies in the placental viviparous bonnethead shark, Sphyrna tiburo, have correlated 17 beta-estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, and dihydrotestosterone with reproductive events in both males and females. However, several key reproductive events, including implantation, maintenance of pregnancy, and parturition, did not correlate with these four steroid hormones. Therefore, the present study investigated three steroid hormones, 11-ketotestosterone, 11-ketoandrostenedione, and dihydroprogesterone, which have demonstrably important roles in the reproductive cycles of teleosts. It was hypothesized that one or more of these three hormones would correlate with specific reproductive events in S. tiburo. Concurrently, developmental (growth and/or maturation) analyses of these three steroids plus 17 beta-estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, and dihydrotestosterone were investigated in juvenile bonnethead sharks. Serum dihydroprogesterone concentrations were highest in mature females and 11-ketotestosterone concentrations were highest in mature males. In mature females, 11-ketoandrostenedione levels were elevated from the time of mating, through six months of sperm storage and another four months of gestation. At parturition concentrations became significantly lower and remained lower until mating occurred again in another two to three months. Serum 11-ketotestosterone concentrations were the highest at implantation though not significant. In mature males, significantly elevated serum levels of dihydroprogesterone occurred in April and May, near the start of annual testicular development. During growth in males, testosterone and dihydrotestosterone increased progressively and in females, testosterone increased progressively. At maturity in males, significant increases occurred in testosterone and 11-ketotestosterone concentrations while, in females, dihydroprogesterone, 11-ketotestosterone, 17 beta-estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, and dihydrotestosterone concentrations increased. This study shows that although testosterone may be the primary androgen in the bonnethead shark, other derived androgens may have important functions in growth, maturation, and reproduction. J. Exp. Zool. 284:595-603, 1999. | lld:pubmed |