Endocrinology Journal Article

Functional Analysis of HSD17B3-Deficient Male Mice Reveals Roles for HSD17B7 and HSD17B12 in Testosterone Biosynthesis

June 17, 2025
 

Ben M Lawrence, Liza O’Donnell, Anne-Louise Gannon, David A Skerrett-Byrne, Shanmathi Parameswaran, Imogen Abbott, Sarah Smith, David J Handelsman, Diane Rebourcet, Lee B Smith
Endocrinology, Volume 166, Issue 6, June 2025, bqaf078
https://doi.org/10.1210/endocr/bqaf078

Abstract

Historically, 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 3 (HSD17B3) was thought to be the key enzyme responsible for testicular testosterone production. In humans, loss-of-function mutations in HSD17B3 impair testosterone production during prenatal life leading to impaired development of androgen-dependent tissues in 46,XY individuals. However, male mice with HSD17B3 deficiency exhibit normal testicular testosterone concentrations, normal development of reproductive organs and are fertile, suggesting that mice express other hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase enzymes capable of testicular testosterone synthesis. This study aimed to investigate whether 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 12 (HSD17B12), which can convert androstenedione to testosterone in mice but not in humans, compensates for the lack of HSD17B3 in Hsd17b3 knockout (KO) mice. We used CRISPR/Cas9 to substitute the amino acid in mouse HSD17B12 that is responsible for its ability to convert androstenedione to testosterone with the amino acid of the human enzyme that prevents androstenedione being used as a substrate. When this Hsd17b12 mutation was introduced into Hsd17b3 KO mice, males exhibited normal reproductive tracts but reduced testicular testosterone production with a consequential reduction in seminal vesicle weight. This suggests HSD17B12 contributes toward testosterone production in the absence of HSD17B3, but other enzymes must also contribute. We therefore quantified other testicular hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases, finding that HSD17B7 mRNA and protein was markedly upregulated in Hsd17b3 KO testes. We confirmed that mouse, but not human, HSD17B7 can produce testosterone in vitro. We conclude that compared to humans, mice exhibit increased plasticity in testosterone production via hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase enzymes to support androgen action and male fertility.

Read the article

 

You may also like...

Publishing Benefits

Author Resource Center

We provide our journal authors with a variety of resources for increasing the discoverability and citation of their published work. Use these tools and tips to broaden the impact of your article.
Publishing Benefits

Author Resource Center

We provide our journal authors with a variety of resources for increasing the discoverability and citation of their published work. Use these tools and tips to broaden the impact of your article.

Thematic Issue

Latest Thematic Issue

immuno-endocrinology
Read our special collections of Endocrine Society journal articles, curated by topic, Altmetric Attention Scores, and Featured Article designations.

Read our special collections of Endocrine Society journal articles, curated by topic, Altmetric Attention Scores, and Featured Article designations.

Back to top

Who We Are

For 100 years, the Endocrine Society has been at the forefront of hormone science and public health. Read about our history and how we continue to serve the endocrine community.