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DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1004976
© Georg Thieme Verlag, Stuttgart · New York
Spironolactone Inhibition of Cortisol Production by Guinea Pig Adrenocortical Cells
Publication History
1989
1990
Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Summary
Prior investigations with adrenal subcellular fractions demonstrated that the diuretic, spironolactone (SL), was converted to a reactive metabolite by adrenal microsomes, resulting in the degradation of microsomal cytochrome(s) P-450. Studies were done to evaluate the effects of SL and 7α-thio-SL, a putative intermediate in the activation pathway, on cortisol production by intact guinea pig adrenocortical cells. Preincubation of adrenal cells with SL or 7α-thio-SL caused time-dependent and concentration-dependent decreases in subsequent ACTH-stimulated cortisol production. 7α-Thio-SL was a far more potent inhibitor than SL. In the absence of a preincubation period, neither SL nor 7α-thio-SL affected cortisol production. The results indicate that the effects of SL on adrenal microsomal cytochrome(s) P-450 compromise steroid synthesis by intact adrenal cells and lend support to the hypothesis that metabolism of the drug is required for the inhibition of steroidogenesis.
Key words
Spironolactone - Adrenal Cortex - Cortisol - Steroidogenesis - Cytochrome P-450