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0022-5347/01/1652-0371/0
THE JOURNAL OF UROLOGY® Copyright © 2001 by AMERICAN UROLOGICAL ASSOCIATION,
INC.©
Vol. 165, 371-373, February 2001
Printed in U.S.A.
Historical Article
A BRIEF HISTORY OF TESTOSTERONE
ERICA R. FREEMAN, DAVID A. BLOOM AND EDWARD J. McGUIRE*
From the Department of Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Abstract
Purpose: We explore the history of testosterone in
the context of medical and scientific developments.
Materials and Methods: A review of the scientific
and historical literature was conducted.
Results: The origins and effects of testosterone
have been recognized throughout the history of humankind. Hunter performed
testicular transplantation experiments in 1767 while studying tissue
transplantation techniques, and almost a century later Berthold linked the
physiological and behavioral changes of castration to a substance secreted by
the testes. Brown-Séquard gave birth to the field of organotherapy in 1889 when
he announced that his auto-injection of testicular extracts resulted in
rejuvenated physical and mental abilities. Steinach and Niehans expanded upon
Brown-Séquard's work with rejuvenation treatments involving vasoligation, tissue
grafts and cellular injections. In 1935 David et al isolated the critical
ingredient in organotherapeutic treatments, testosterone.
Conclusions: The effects of the powerful hormone
testosterone continue to inspire research and
controversy 65 years later.
Keywords: testosterone, hormones, testis, brown-sequard
syndrome
Ancient Endocrinology
The circumstances whereby a neolithic farmer in Asia Minor
discovered that castration of animals improved their domestication will never be
known but the effects of testosterone and its primary source have been crystal
clear for at least 6,000 years.
As classical thinkers, including Aristotle,
Hippocrates, Lucretius, Celsus and Galen, tried to establish how things worked
in health and disease, a humoral basis of biological function must have seemed
logical and realistic. The western mind constructed a model of 4 humors in
perfect balance and the eastern mind favored a yin and yang paradigm, seeking
some unifying hypothesis to inform theory. The sources of imbalance in the
humors, or of yin and yang, were related variously to the stars, moon, weather,
diet, mood or injury. These ideas largely comprised much of the
conceptual basis of medical practice during several millennia
until only recently. A specific organ based humoral excess, as
recognized by that neolithic farmer, fit nicely into the humoral
paradigm. After castration all sorts of other manipulations
were brought to bear on perceived humoral disproportions
and imbalances. Diet, purging, change of climate and bleeding held powerful
positions in medical practice well into
the 19th century. However, by that time the conceptual basis
of medicine was broadening with the germ theory, physiology
and organ basis of pathology.
19TH Century Forays
John Hunter (1728-1793) performed deliberate testicular
transplantation in 1767, transferring the testis of a cock into
the abdominal cavity of a hen.1 The testis adhered
to the
intestine or peritoneum but produced no noticeable systemic
change in the recipient. However, Hunter, was more interested
in the techniques of tissue transplantation than the effects. He did not publish
any findings, and evidence of the experiment exists only in notes taken at his
lectures.
2 Accepted for
publication September 29, 2000. * Financial interest and/or other relationship
with Bard.
In 1849 Arnold Berthold (1801-1863) had the advantages of
19th century science to link the physiological and behavioral
changes of castration to a substance secreted by the testes.3
In roosters castration routinely produced regression of the
comb and wattle. Returning the testes of castrated roosters to
the abdominal cavity, Berthold found that the characteristic
regression did not occur. Since the severed testicles were no
longer connected to nerves, he concluded that the testes must affect behavioral
and sexual characteristics by secreting a substance into the bloodstream.
Charles Edouard Brown-Séquard (1817-1894), the son of a
Philadelphia seaman and a woman of Mauritian-French descent, investigated
endocrine pathology for several decades (fig. 1). His 1856 study on the effects
of extirpation of the adrenal glands in animals was a milestone.4
He became
convinced that in addition to the testes, the thyroid, adrenal,
pancreas, liver, spleen and kidneys contained secretions that
could be useful in treating disease.5
Brown-Sequard
further
piqued mainstream scientific interest in the chemical contents
of the testes with his famous auto-experimentation. On June 1, 1889, before the
Sociète de Biologic in Paris, Brown-Sequard reported that he had increased his physical strength,
mental abilities and appetite by self-injection with an extract
derived from the testicles of dogs and guinea pigs.6
Although
never substantiated, this claim prompted researchers around the world to pursue
the new field of organotherapy, injecting
testicular derivatives and transplanting human or animal
testicles into patients to treat epilepsy, tuberculosis, diabetes,
paralysis, gangrene, anemia, arteriosclerosis, influenza,
Addison's disease, hysteria and migraine.7 By the
end of 1889
more than 12,000 physicians were administering Brown-
Sequard's fluid, and manufacturing chemists were making
fortunes selling the new “Elixir of Life.”8,9
In the United
States in particular physicians uneducated in the techniques
and inherent risks of animal injections exploited the public
fervor, putting many patients at risk for infection and
inflammation.10
A Brief History Of Testosterone
FIG. 1. Charles Edouard Brown-Séquard's auto-injection of testicular extracts
led to development of organotherapy. Photogravure by Heliog Dujardin.
HORMONE—A 20TH CENTURY NEOLOGISM
In 1902 William Bayliss (1860-1924) and Ernest Starling
(1866-1927), professors from the Department of Physiology at
University College in London, recovered a unique substance
from an extract of duodenal mucosa.11 When injected
into the
bloodstream this substance, which they called secretin,
stimulated the secretion of water and bicarbonate by a
denervated pancreas. Like Berthold, Bayliss and Starling
suggested that chemical secretion rather than nervous control was responsible
for the physiological occurrences they observed. Furthermore, Bayliss and
Starling postulated that blood borne messengers with targets far from the
tissues of origin might regulate many other functions. These substances were
ambiguously referred to as “chemical messengers” until William B. Hardy
(1864-1934), a Cambridge physiologist, proposed the name hormone during a visit
to Bayliss and Starling's laboratory. Hardy derived the term from a Greek word
meaning “I arouse to activity,” in the sense of “setting something in motion.”12,13
Starling used the word hormone for the first time on June 20, 1905 while giving
a Croonian Lecture at the Royal College of Physicians of London.14
The term made its first printed appearance on August 5, 1905 when
Starling's address was published in the Lancet.15
Rejuvenation in Practice
Following in the footsteps of Brown-Séquard, Viennese
physiologist Eugen Steinach (1861-1944) studied the rejuvenating effects of
vasoligation in older animals. In 1920 Steinach concluded that unilateral
vasoligation of the ductus deferens produced an increased hormonal production
after cessation of the secretory output of the gonads. His “auto-plastic”
treatment for “middle-aged, listless individuals” became a popular surgical
procedure during the next 2 decades. Patients who underwent the “Steinach
operation” included Sigmund Freud, and Irish poet and Nobel prize winner William
Butler Yeats. Steinach also grafted testicular tissue between the peritoneal
muscles and claimed similar results.16,17
A Swiss genitourinary surgeon, Paul Niehans (1882-1971),
claimed to have performed more than 50,000 “cellular therapy” treatments.
Niehans envisioned the replacement of organ transplantation by the injection of
viable cells, and he built this concept into a comprehensive system of
treatment. Under functioning organs were treated with cells of the same organ,
and cells of the antagonistic organ were injected in cases of over function.
Niehans' 1960 book Introduction to Cellular Therapy describes this technique as
“a method of treating the whole organism on a biological basis, capable of
revitalizing the human organism with trillions of cells by bringing to it those
embryonic or young cells which it needs.”18
Although he worked with a wide variety of endocrine preparations, much of
Niehans' work focused on testicular secretions. He contended that the injection
of testicular cells increased the long-term excretion of testosterone
derivatives. His patients included Pope Pius XII, Bernard Baruch and Aristotle
Onassis.19
Isolation Of Testosterone
The pharmaceutical industry was anxious to capitalize on
the popularity of organotherapy despite its dubious effectiveness. Competition
resulted in a race among 3 research teams for the isolation of the testicular
hormone. Adolf Butenandt, a chemistry student from the University of Marburg
with a doctorate from Gottingen, influenced by the work of his professor Aor
Windaus (1876-1959) on cholesterol, began to explore the sex hormones. Windaus,
professor of chemistry at Gottingen, received the 1928 Nobel prize in chemistry
for his steroid and vitamin work. Butenandt isolated the first pure sex hormone,
estrone, in 1929 from the urine of pregnant women. He then isolated 15 mg. of a
pure substance from an immense quantity of policemen urine, variously reported
as 15,000 20 to 25,000 21,22
1. Butenandt identified this product as androsterone (andro = male, ster =
sterol, one = ketone),23 and presented its discovery at a Hamburg chemical
meeting on October 23, 1931. His ideas for the structure of androsterone were
confirmed in 1934 when Leopold Ruzicka (1887-1976), a chemist in Zurich,
synthesized the hormone.
Testes proved to contain a more powerful androgenic factor.
In 1935 Karoly Gyula David, E. Dingemanse, J. Freud and
Ernst Laqueur, backed by the Organon Company in Oss, The
Netherlands, published the now classic paper, "On Crystalline
Male Hormone from Testicles (Testosterone)," coining a name
for the newly identified hormone (testo = testes, ster — sterol,
one = ketone).24 The synthesis of testosterone came
later that
year when the journal Zeitschrift fuer Physiologische Chemie
received “A Method for Preparing Testosterone from Cholesterol” by Butenandt and
G. Hanish, funded by the
Schering Corporation in Berlin. Just 1 week after Butenandt's
article appeared, Helvetica Chimica Acta published “On the
Artificial Preparation of the Testicular Hormone Testosterone
(Andro-sten-3-one-17-ol)” by Ruzicka and A. Wettstein,25 and
the researchers applied for a patent. Ruzicka and Butenandt
were offered the 1939 Nobel prize for chemistry for their work
but Butenandt was forced by the Nazi government to decline
the honor.25
Testosterone Today
Biologically synthesized testosterone is produced in the
Leydig cells of the testes, adrenal glands and other peripheral
sites. A series of enzymes convert the side chain at C-17 of the cholesterol
precursor to a hydroxyl group, transfer a double bond from C-6 to C-4 and
oxidize the hydroxyl group at C-3 to a carbonyl group (fig. 2).26
Secretion is controlled by a negative feedback mechanism involving
luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), tropic hormones
synthesized by the anterior pituitary gland.
FIG. 2. Molecular structure of testosterone, steroid hormone, includes
lipid soluble cholesterol nucleus and polar hydroxyl side chain.
Like all steroid hormones, testosterone
stimulates the synthesis of
specific proteins by crossing the cell membrane and binding
with a receptor in the nucleus, activating particular genes.
Testosterone production begins early in the development of
the human fetus, and determines sexual differentiation during
an early “sensitive period” in month 3 or 4 of pregnancy.27
Early in the 20th century some researchers supported a
hormonal theory of sexuality, which supposed that the ratio
of male-to-female sex hormones determined human sexual
preference. Testosterone treatments were frequently prescribed
as therapy for male homosexuals, and in the United
States at least 11 homosexual men received transplants of
testicular tissue extracted from heterosexual men. However,
the ability of hormones to alter sexual preference was never
scientifically established.28 Attempts to correlate testosterone
levels and aggression have been made by studying the
biochemistry of criminals. Although extremely high testosterone
levels correspond to increased aggressive behavior,
social and educational factors correlate far more strongly
with delinquent behavior,29
Testosterone treatments have
been used to treat certain metastatic breast tumors in
women, despite virilizing side effects. Body builders epicentered
on the west coast experimented with testosterone supplements
in the 1940s and 1950s, spawning the black market
that supplies drugs to today's estimated 1 million steroid
abusers in the United States.7
In recent years the influence of testosterone on physical
well-being has once again become a focus of research attention.
In particular, the safety and effectiveness of testosterone
therapy in treating erectile dysfunction are subjects of
controversy. For patients with castrate or near castrate testosterone
levels, hormone replacement has been shown to
increase libido, improve erectile function and maintain secondary
sexual characteristics. However, patients with erectile
dysfunction and normal testosterone levels or mild hypotestosteronemia
have not shown any consistent
improvement in erectile function as a result of testosterone
therapy. Although testosterone replacement recipients show
significant increases in sexual interest, arousal, frequency of
sex acts and nocturnal erections, erectile function may not
correlate strongly with testosterone, particularly in men with
near normal testosterone levels. Nonetheless, testosterone
treatment is widely used to treat erectile dysfunction.30
Conclusions
Although the name testosterone is only 65 years old, the
hormone that it identifies has been a focus of scientific interest
for almost 150 years and its distinct effects have been obvious
throughout the history of mankind. Its influence on physical
and sexual development and its potentially therapeutic properties
continue to inspire new research and controversy.
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