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1.
Changes in the contents of 36 mRNAs species related to lipid turnover, inflammation, metabolism and the action of sex hormones in samples of aortal intima along the “intact tissue — lesions of type I — lesions of type II — lesions of type Va” sequence were analyzed using quantitative PCR. The expression of several mRNAs coding for components of the vesicular transfer and lipid turnover machinery was found to be resistant to atherogenesis or even decline in the course of atherogenesis. Decrease in expression was also recorded for steroid sulfatase, androgen receptor, and low density lipoprotein receptor mRNAs. However, the contents of the majority of other mRNA species increased gradually during disease progression. The earliest changes found as early as in lesions of type I were characteristic for estrogen sulfotransferase, apolipoprotein E, scavenger receptor SR-BI, collagen COL1A2, as well as chemokine CCL18 mRNAs. The contents of several mRNAs in intact tissue and atherosclerotic injuries had gender differences. Additionally, responses of two mRNAs, for aromatase and sterol regulatory element binding protein 2, to atherosclerotic lesion were also sex-differentiated. The contents of the majority of analyzed mRNAs in peripheral blood monocyte-derived macrophages were higher than in intact aorta. The correlations found in atherosclerotic lesions between mRNA species that predominant in macrophages and those expressed at comparable levels in macrophages and intact aorta or mainly in aorta suggest that the observed rise in the content of the majority of mRNAs during atherogenesis is determined by increase in expression in resident cells. The data suggest that the revealed absence of homeostatic regulation of expression of a number of genes associated with vesicular transfer and lipid turnover can serve as one of the reasons for lysosomal function insufficiency that leads to foam cell formation in atheroma. The observed sex differences in expression of a number of mRNAs suggest that estrogens in women perform their atheroprotective effects starting with predisposition to the disease and finishing with advanced stages of the pathologic process.  相似文献   

2.
The role of estrogen on male reproductive function has become clearer in the last decade. During these years the study of the effect of testosterone, estrogen or an aromatase inhibitor in hypogonadal men provided a first evidence of the effects of estrogens in the regulation of gonadotropin secretion. At the same time, the development of a line of transgenic male mice lacking estrogen receptor α, estrogen receptor β or aromatase gene provided further evidence about the role of estrogens not only in the regulation of gonadotropin secretion, but also on the effects of estrogens on testicular function and development. A confirmation of these actions of estrogens came from the observation of naturally occurring mutations of the estrogen receptor and of the aromatase gene in human males. Based on these data it has been demonstrated that estrogens are major regulators of gonadotropin secretion acting both at pituitary and hypotalamic level. The presence in the human reproductive structures of estrogen receptor α, estrogen receptor β and the aromatase enzyme indicates the existence of receptor α, estrogen receptor β or aromatase estrogen actions at this level. Anyway, the precise role of estrogens in testicular development and function and on the regulation of human spermatogenesis has not yet been precisely clarified.  相似文献   

3.
In adult male primates, estrogens play a role in both gonadotropin feedback and sexual behavior. Inhibition of aromatization in intact male monkeys acutely elevates serum levels of luteinizing hormone, an effect mediated, at least partially, within the brain. High levels of aromatase (CYP19) are present in the monkey brain and regulated by androgens in regions thought to be involved in the central regulation of reproduction. Androgens regulate aromatase pretranslationally and androgen receptor activation is correlated with the induction of aromatase activity. Aromatase and androgen receptor mRNAs display both unique and overlapping distributions within the hypothalamus and limbic system suggesting that androgens and androgen-derived estrogens regulate complimentary and interacting genes within many neural networks. Long-term castrated monkeys, like men, exhibit an estrogen-dependent neural deficit that could be an underlying cause of the insensitivity to testosterone that develops in states of chronic androgen deficiency. Future studies of in situ estrogen formation in brain in the primate model are important for understanding the importance of aromatase not only for reproduction, but also for neural functions such as memory and cognition that appear to be modulated by estrogens.  相似文献   

4.
The role of estrogen on male reproductive function has become clearer in the last decade. During these years the study of the effect of testosterone, estrogen or an aromatase inhibitor in hypogonadal men provided a first evidence of the effects of estrogens in the regulation of gonadotropin secretion. At the same time, the development of a line of transgenic male mice lacking estrogen receptor α, estrogen receptor β or aromatase gene provided further evidence about the role of estrogens not only in the regulation of gonadotropin secretion, but also on the effects of estrogens on testicular function and development. A confirmation of these actions of estrogens came from the observation of naturally occurring mutations of the estrogen receptor and of the aromatase gene in human males. Based on these data it has been demonstrated that estrogens are major regulators of gonadotropin secretion acting both at pituitary and hypotalamic level. The presence in the human reproductive structures of estrogen receptor α, estrogen receptor β and the aromatase enzyme indicates the existence of receptor α, estrogen receptor β or aromatase estrogen actions at this level. Anyway, the precise role of estrogens in testicular development and function and on the regulation of human spermatogenesis has not yet been precisely clarified.  相似文献   

5.
A broad expression of aromatase and estrogen receptors (ERs) in the testis suggests an important role for estrogens in regulating testicular cell function and reproductive events. The aim of the present study was to show whether Leydig cells in vitro isolated from cryptorchid testes of two inbred strains of mice, KE and CBA, are a site of estrogen synthesis. Using immunocytochemistry, aromatase, estrogen receptor alpha(ERalpha), and estrogen receptor beta(ERbeta) were localized in cultured Leydig cells. Immunoreactive aromatase was found in the cytoplasm of control Leydig cells and those isolated from cryptorchid males, however the intensity of immunostaining was different, being stronger in Leydig cells deriving from cryptorchid mice. The strongest aromatase immunostaining was found in cryptorchid-KE Leydig cells. Strong immunoexpression of ERalpha was detected in the nuclei of both KE-and CBA-Leydig cells. The intensity of ERalpha immunostaining was stronger in cultured cells deriving from cryptorchid testes. ERbeta immunoexpression was detected predominantly in KE-Leydig cells. Control CBA-Leydig cells were negative for ERbeta or the result was inconclusive, whereas in cryptorchid CBA-Leydig cells a weak immunostaining was present in their nuclei. Western blot analysis confirmed the results obtained by immunocytochemistry. In KE- and CBA-Leydig cells aromatase as a band of 55 kDa protein was present, whereas ERalpha molecular weight was 67 kDa on Western blots. No band was detected for ERbeta. Radioimmunological analysis revealed that androgen and estrogen levels secreted by Leydig cells in vitro were strain-dependent. Additionally, in KE-Leydig cells that derived from cryptorchid mice estrogen level was distinctly higher in comparison with that of the respective control.  相似文献   

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Clinical case reports have documented disturbances of carbohydrate and lipid metabolism in aromatase deficient and estrogen resistant males. The aim of the present study was to explore the metabolic functions of estrogens in male mice and to dissect the estrogen receptor (ER) specificity of such effects. Total body fat content and serum levels of leptin were followed in ERalpha knockout (ERKO), ERbeta knockout (BERKO), and ERalpha/beta double knockout (DERKO) mice. Neither the total body fat nor serum leptin levels were altered in any group before or during sexual maturation. However, after sexual maturation ERKO and DERKO, but not BERKO, demonstrated a clear increase in total body fat and enhanced serum leptin levels. Serum cholesterol was increased and a qualitative change in the lipoprotein profile, including smaller LDL particles, was observed in ERKO and DERKO mice. In conclusion, ERalpha but not ERbeta-inactivated male mice develop obesity after sexual maturation.  相似文献   

8.
Primary evidence for novel estrogen signaling pathways is based upon well-documented estrogenic responses not inhibited by estrogen receptor antagonists. In addition to 17beta-E2, the catechol estrogen 4-hydroxyestradiol (4OHE2) has been shown to elicit biological responses independent of classical estrogen receptors in estrogen receptor-alpha knockout (ERalphaKO) mice. Consequently, our research was designed to biochemically characterize the protein(s) that could be mediating the biological effects of catechol estrogens using enzymatically synthesized, radiolabeled 4-hydroxyestrone (4OHE1) and 4OHE2. Scatchard analyses identified a single class of high-affinity (K(d) approximately 1.6 nM), saturable cytosolic binding sites in several ERalphaKO estrogen-responsive tissues. Specific catechol estrogen binding was competitively inhibited by unlabeled catechol estrogens, but not by 17beta-E2 or the estrogen receptor antagonist ICI 182,780. Tissue distribution studies indicated significant binding differences both within and among various tissues in wild-type, ERalphaKO, and aromatase knockout female mice. Ligand metabolism experiments revealed extensive metabolism of labeled catechol estrogen, suggesting that catechol estrogen metabolites were responsible for the specific binding. Collectively, our data provide compelling evidence for the interaction of catechol estrogen metabolites with a novel binding protein that exhibits high affinity, specificity, and selective tissue distribution. The extensive biochemical characterization of this binding protein indicates that this protein may be a receptor, and thus may mediate ERalpha/beta-independent effects of catechol estrogens and their metabolites.  相似文献   

9.
Estrogens--male hormones?   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
The cytochrome P450 aromatase is the terminal enzyme responsible for the irreversible transformation of androgens into estrogens; it is present in the endoplasmic reticulum membrane of cells and rather ubiquitous in its localization. The aromatase gene is unique in humans and its expression is regulated in a cell-specific manner via the alternative use of various promoters located in the first exon I of the CYP19 gene. The aromatase gene expression and its translation into a fully active protein have been shown in most of the testicular cells including germ cells as well as in the epithelial cells of the epididymis in mammals. Together with the widespread distribution of estrogen receptors (ERalpha and ERbeta) in the genital tract of the male, a physiological role for estrogens in the regulation of mammalian reproductive functions including the regulation of gonadotropin feedback, is now well recognized. Moreover, in men the aromatase deficiency is associated with severe bone maturation problems, alterations of lipid and sugar metabolism and sterility; but conversely an excess of estrogens is responsible for the impairment of spermatogenesis. In addition, estrogens play an important role in the control of osteoporosis and of atherosclerosis, especially in elderly men. Consequently, estradiol seems to be a critical factor not only for normal reproduction (at least for maturation and survival of germ cells) but also for various physiological processes and thus, estrogens should be now considered as "male hormones".  相似文献   

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11.
Prostate cancer is the commonest non-skin cancer in men. Incidence and mortality rates of this tumor vary strikingly throughout the world. Although several factors have been implicated to explain this remarkable variation, lifestyle and dietary factors may play a dominant role, with sex hormones behaving as intermediaries between exogenous factors and molecular targets in development and progression of prostate cancer. Human prostate cancer is generally considered a paradigm of androgen-dependent tumor; however, estrogen role in both normal and malignant prostate appears to be equally important. The association between plasma androgens and prostate cancer remains contradictory and mostly not compatible with the androgen hypothesis. Similar evidence apply to estrogens, although the ratio of androgen to estrogen in plasma declines with age. Apart from methodological problems, a major issue is to what extent circulating hormones can be considered representative of their intraprostatic levels. Both nontumoral and malignant human prostate tissues and cells are endowed with key enzymes of steroid metabolism, including 17betahydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17betaHSD), 5beta-reductase, 3alpha/3betaHSD, and aromatase. A divergent expression and/or activity of these enzymes may eventually lead to a differential prostate accumulation of steroid derivatives having distinct biological activities, as it occurs for hydroxylated estrogens in the human breast. Locally produced or metabolically transformed estrogens may differently affect proliferative activity of prostate cancer cells. Aberrant aromatase expression and activity has been reported in prostate tumor tissues and cells, implying that androgen aromatization to estrogens may play a role in prostate carcinogenesis or tumor progression. Interestingly, many genes encoding for steroid enzymes are polymorphic, although only a few studies have supported their relation with risk of prostate cancer. In animal model systems estrogens, combined with androgens, appear to be required for the malignant transformation of prostate epithelial cells. Although the mechanisms underlying the hormonal induction of prostate cancer in experimental animals remain uncertain, there is however evidence to support the assumption that long term administration of androgens and estrogens results in an estrogenic milieu in rat prostates and in the ensuing development of dysplasia and cancer. Both androgen and estrogen have been reported to stimulate proliferation of cultured prostate cancer cells, primarily through receptor-mediated effects. As for estrogens, the two major receptor types, ERalpha and ERbeta, are expressed in both normal and diseased human prostate, though with a different cellular localization. Since these two receptors are different in terms of ligand binding, heterodimerization, transactivation, and estrogen response element activity, it is likely that an imbalance of their expression may be critical to determine the ultimate estrogen effects on prostate cancer cells. In prostate cancer, ERbeta activation appears to limit cell proliferation directly or through ERalpha inhibition, and loss of ERbeta has been consistently associated with tumor progression. Several splicing variants of both ERalpha and ERbeta exist. Little is known about their expression and function in the human prostate, although reciprocal regulation and interaction with gene promoter both warrant further investigation. In summary, although multiple consistent evidence suggests that estrogens are critical players in human prostate cancer, their role has been only recently reconsidered, being eclipsed for years by an androgen-dominated interest.  相似文献   

12.
Third generation aromatase inhibitors have excellent specificity. Some reports indicate that letrozole may have a minor effect on cortisol synthesis but these were not confirmed: valid comparisons with other aromatase inhibitors requires randomised study.

The putative use of a third generation inhibitor as a single agent in premenopausal women has been investigated using YM511. It was hypothesised that in this situation site-specific suppression of estrogens in breast carcinomas, without systemic effects, may lead to a down-regulation of tumour proliferation. Plasma levels of androstenedione and testosterone were significantly increased by 2 weeks treatment with YM511. Mean plasma estrone levels were suppressed, but some plasma estradiol levels were abnormally high and others abnormally low. These differential effects of YM511 on circulating estrogens supported the concept that peripheral synthesis of estrogens might be suppressed while ovarian production remained high. However, YM511 did not demonstrate anti-proliferative effects in hormone sensitive breast carcinomas.

Consideration of the pharmacology of the estrogen receptor during tamoxifen therapy indicates that tamoxifen effectively saturates the receptor (>99.94% occupancy) in postmenopausal women. The addition of an aromatase inhibitor in this situation would be very unlikely to affect the biological activity of the estrogen receptor. This provides a possible explanation why the clinical efficacy of tamoxifen combined with an aromatase inhibitor appears to be equivalent to that of tamoxifen alone.  相似文献   


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14.
The effects of estrogens on gonadotropin-stimulated luteinizing hormone (LH) receptor formation were examined in primary cultures of rat granulosa cells. Granulosa cells were cultured for 3 days with increasing concentrations of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) in the presence or absence of native and synthetic estrogens. Follicle-stimulating hormone stimulated LH receptor formation in a dose-dependent fashion, and estrogens enhanced the FSH-stimulated LH receptor content by decreasing the apparent ED50 of FSH. At 6.25 ng/ml FSH, the enhancement in LH receptor was estrogen dose dependent, with an ED50 value of about 3 X 10(-9) M for 17 beta-estradiol. The increased LH receptor content seen in cells treated with FSH and estrogen was correlated with increased cAMP production by these cells in response to LH stimulation. Time course studies revealed enhancement of FSH-stimulated LH receptor induction at 48 and 72 h of culture. Granulosa cells were also cultured with FSH for 2 days to induce functional LH receptors, then further cultured for 3 days with LH in the presence or absence of estrogens. At 30 ng/ml LH, increasing concentrations of estrogens maintained LH receptor content in a dose-dependent fashion, with their relative estrogenic potencies in keeping with reported binding affinities to estrogen receptors. An autocrine role of estrogens on LH receptor formation was further tested in granulosa cells treated with FSH and an aromatase substrate (androstenedione) to increase estrogen biosynthesis. Cotreatment with semipurified estrogen antibodies partially blocked the FSH stimulation of LH receptors, whereas nonimmune serum was ineffective. Also, inclusion of diethylstilbestrol prevented the inhibitory effect of the estrogen antibodies. Thus, local estrogens in ovarian follicles may play an autocrine role in granulosa cells to enhance LH receptor formation and to increase granulosa cell responsiveness to the LH surge, with subsequent ovulation and adequate corpus luteum formation.  相似文献   

15.
As part of highly active antiretroviral therapy, protease inhibitor treatment has significantly increased the lifespan of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals. Many patients, however, develop negative side effects, including premature atherosclerosis. We have previously demonstrated that in male low density lipoprotein receptor (LDL-R) null mice, HIV protease inhibitors induce atherosclerotic lesions and cholesterol accumulation in macrophages in the absence of changes in plasma lipid levels. We determined that these increases were due to an up-regulation of the scavenger receptor, CD36. In the present study, we examined the effects of HIV protease inhibitors in female LDL-R null mice. Female mice given ritonavir and amprenavir (23 and 10 microg/mouse/day, respectively) developed fewer atherosclerotic lesions than males. Furthermore, peritoneal macrophages isolated from ritonavir-treated females had reduced levels of cholesterol accumulation as compared with males, and CD36 protein levels were increased to a significantly lesser degree in females than in males. To investigate the molecular mechanisms of this gender difference, we examined the effect of genetically removing estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha). In female mice lacking both LDL-R and ERalpha, the protective effect of gender was lost. Additionally, the reduced levels of cholesterol accumulation in macrophages observed in females was reversed. Furthermore, the absence of ERalpha resulted in increased expression of CD36 protein in a macrophage-specific manner in mice treated with ritonavir. These data demonstrate that ERalpha is directly involved in the regulation of cholesterol metabolism in macrophages and plays an important role in the gender differences observed in HIV protease inhibitor-induced atherosclerosis.  相似文献   

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19.
Brain aromatase cytochrome P450 converts androgens to estrogens that play a critical role in the development of sexually dimorphic neural structures, the modulation of neuroendocrine function(s), and the regulation of sexual behavior. We characterized the influence of surgical castration on brain aromatase in Norway Brown and Wistar adult rats and compared their responses to Sprague-Dawley rats that were surgically or biochemically castrated (with flutamide, a known androgen receptor blocker). Aromata enzyme activity was measured by the tritiated water release assay in the medial basal hypothalmus/preoptic area (MBH/POA) and amygdala brain regions. The present results demonstrate that independent of the rat strain examined, MBH/POA aromatase is regulated by androgens (in Sprague-Dawley, Norway Brown and Wistar males). However, intact Wistar animals displayed significantly higher MBH/POA aromatase levels compared to Sprague-Dawley control values. Conversely, in the amygdala region, there was an apparent lack of androgen hormone action upon aromatase enzyme activity in some of the rat strains tested. The importance of brain aromatase regulating estrogen biosynthesis and influencing brain development and function is covered.  相似文献   

20.
Estrogens affect the development, maturation, and function of multiple organ systems, including the immune system. One of the main targets of estrogens in the immune system is the thymus, which undergoes atrophy and phenotypic alterations when exposed to elevated levels of estrogen. To determine how estrogens influence the thymus and affect T cell development, estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) knockout (ERKO) mice were examined. ERKO mice have significantly smaller thymi than their wild-type (WT) littermates. Construction of ER radiation bone marrow chimeras indicated that the smaller thymi were due to a lack of ERalpha in radiation-resistant tissues rather than hemopoietic elements. ERKO mice were also susceptible to estradiol-induced thymic atrophy, but the extent of their atrophy was less than what was seen in WT mice. The estradiol-treated ERKO mice failed, however, to manifest alterations in their thymic CD4/CD8 phenotypes compared with WT mice. Therefore, ERalpha is essential in nonhemopoietic cells to obtain a full-sized thymus, and ERalpha also mediates some of the response of the thymus to elevated estrogen levels. Finally, these results suggest that in addition to ERalpha, another receptor pathway is involved in estradiol-induced thymic atrophy.  相似文献   

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