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1.
The placenta provides a maternal-fetal exchange interface that maximizes the diffusion of gases, nutrients, and wastes. However, the placenta also may permit diffusion of lipid-soluble steroid hormones that influence processes such as sex-specific fetal development and maternal pregnancy maintenance. In mammals, placental steroid metabolism contributes to regulation of maternal and fetal hormone levels. Such mechanisms may be less highly developed in species that have recently evolved placentation, such as many reptiles. We therefore chose to investigate placental metabolism of steroids in the viviparous lizard Sceloporus jarrovi. In vitro tissue incubations tested the abilities of the chorioallantoic placenta to clear progesterone and corticosterone by converting them to other metabolites and to synthesize progesterone. Placental tissue rapidly cleared progesterone and corticosterone added to the incubation media, indicating that the tissue had converted the steroids to other products. Placental tissue also synthesized substantial concentrations of progesterone from the prohormone pregnenolone. Thus, even in a species with a simple, recently evolved placenta, steroid metabolism appears to be highly developed and could be critical for regulation of maternal and fetal hormone levels. This finding suggests that placental hormone metabolism may be critical to the successful evolution of placentation.  相似文献   

2.
Ovarian and placental steroids are essential for the maintenance of pregnancy. In some mammals it is evident that the placenta is responsible for the production of steroids. However, in the domestic cat, steroid secretion from the placenta has not yet been elucidated. Our study aimed to find out whether feline placentae are able to produce steroids. Placentae from different pregnancy stages were analyzed for mRNA expression of five steroidogenic enzymes (HSD3B1, CYP11A1, CYP17A1, HSD17B1 and CYP19A1) and for tissue concentrations of progesterone and estradiol. Steroidogenic enzymes responsible for the final steps of estradiol (CYP19A1) and progesterone synthesis (HSD3B) were expressed at very high levels and followed almost the same pattern over pregnancy as the intraplacental hormones themselves. By contrast, the other enzymes were found in very low quantities suggesting that biosynthesis occurs via extra-placental steroid precursors. The plasma steroid profiles measured by other groups differ from the placental hormone courses determined by us; therefore we conclude that the feline placenta can produce progesterone and estradiol.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The production of a steroid hormone in the placenta is essential for maintaining the pregnancy and developing the fetus during gestation. In various steroidogenic tissues (including gonads and adrenal cortex), the steroidogenic-acute-regulatory protein (StAR) acutely transfers cholesterol from the outer to the inner mitochondrial membrane for rapid steroidogenesis. Although steroid hormones were synthesized in the rat placenta, the developmental expression of StAR has been poorly understood in the rat placenta during mid-late pregnancy. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to establish the expression and localization of StAR mRNA in the rat placenta during mid-late pregnancy using Northern blots and in situ hybridization. The Northern blot analysis showed that the StAR mRNA expression significantly changed as the gestation day (GD) progressed. The placental expression of StAR mRNA increased between GD 11 and 13, and then slightly decreased until term. In situ hybridization showed a strong StAR expression in giant trophoblast cells on GD 11 and 13, and a moderate expression in trophoblast and stroma cells within the villi of the labyrinth zone throughout the pregnancy. In this study, we reveal for the first time the existence of StAR mRNA in steroidogenic cells of the placenta during mid-late pregnancy. In conclusion, our results suggest that StAR may regulate steroidogenesis in the rat placenta to maintain the pregnancy and developing the fetus.  相似文献   

5.
Late gestation foetus from rats fed a non-absorbable bile acid binding resin (cholestyramine) have increased hepatic 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase activity. This was due to increased unphosphorylated (active) as well as total reductase and was accompanied by higher fatty acid synthetase activity. No increase in foetal hepatic cystathionase or tyrosine aminotransferase activity, or changes in plasma insulin, corticosterone or thyroxine were found. The studies demonstrate that foetal hepatic cholesterol metabolism is sensitive to drug-induced perturbation of maternal lipoprotein metabolism. The data suggest induction of foetal cholesterol and fatty acid synthesis by a specific mechanism not involving generalized hormone-induction of hepatic enzyme systems. Cholestyramine appears to have application for in vivo study of the regulation of foetal cholesterologenesis and its coordination to maternal and foetal steroid requirements.  相似文献   

6.
Human placenta produces a large variety of bioactive substances with endocrine and neural competence: pituitary and gonadal hormones, hypothalamic-like releasing or inhibiting hormones, growth factors, cytokines and neuropeptides. The most recent findings indicate that locally produced hormones regulate the secretion of other placental hormones supporting a paracrine/autocrine regulation. In placental endocrinology, a particular relevance is played by steroid hormones. In fact, a specific gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) regulation of placental steroidogenesis has been proposed as a placental internal regulatory system acting on steroids production from human placenta. In addition, activin and inhibin have been proposed as further regulatory substances of the synthesis and secretion of steroids; the addition of activin A to placental culture augments GnRH, hCG and progesterone, and this effect can be significantly reduced by the addition of inhibins. Finally, a steroid-steroid interaction is suggested by the evidence that placental estrogen has a positive role in the regulation of progesterone biosynthesis. Other steroid-protein interactions have been observed in human placenta. In fact, recent data indicate that progesterone inhibits placental corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and estrogens act on placental conversion of cortisol to cortisone, activating cortisol secretion by the fetal adrenal and enhancing fetal adrenal function with advancing gestation.  相似文献   

7.
In this review, we focused on the intersection between steroid metabolomics, obstetrics and steroid neurophysiology to give a comprehensive insight into the role of sex hormones and neuroactive steroids (NAS) in the mechanism controlling pregnancy sustaining. The data in the literature including our studies show that there is a complex mechanism providing synthesis of either pregnancy sustaining or parturition provoking steroids. This mechanism includes the boosting placental synthesis of CRH with approaching parturition inducing the excessive synthesis of 3beta-hydroxy-5-ene steroid sulfates serving primarily as precursors for placental synthesis of progestogens, estrogens and NAS. The distribution and changing activities of placental oxidoreductases are responsible for the activation or inactivation of the aforementioned steroids, which is compartment-specific (maternal and fetal compartments) and dependent on gestational age, with a tendency to shift the production from the pregnancy-sustaining steroids to the parturition provoking ones with an increasing gestational age. The fetal and maternal livers catabolize part of the bioactive steroids and also convert some precursors to bioactive steroids. Besides the progesterone, a variety of its 5alpha/beta-reduced metabolites may significantly influence the maintenance of human pregnancy, provide protection against excitotoxicity following acute hypoxic stress, and might also affect the pain perception in mother and fetus.  相似文献   

8.
Life‐history theory predicts that access to limited resources leads to trade‐offs between competing body functions. Women, who face higher costs of reproduction when compared to men, should be especially vulnerable to these trade‐offs. We propose the ‘cognitive costs of reproduction hypothesis’, which states that energy trade‐offs imposed by reproduction may lead to a decline in maternal cognitive function during gestation. In particular, we hypothesize that the decline in cognitive function frequently observed during pregnancy is associated with the allocation of resources between the competing energetic requirements of the mother's brain and the developing foetus. Several distinctive anatomical and physiological features including a high metabolic rate of the brain, large infant size, specific anatomical features of the placenta and trophoblast, and the lack of maternal control over glucose flow through the placenta make the occurrence of these trade‐offs likely. Herein, we review several lines of evidence for trade‐offs between gestation and cognition that are related to: (i) energy metabolism during reproduction; (ii) energy metabolism of the human brain; (iii) links between energy metabolism and cognitive function; and (iv) links between gestation and cognitive function. We also review evidence for the important roles of cortisol, corticotropin‐releasing hormone and sex hormones in mediating the effects of gestation on cognition, and we discuss possible neurophysiological mechanisms underlying the observed effects. The evidence supports the view that energy trade‐offs between foetal growth and maternal endocrine and brain function lead to changes in maternal cognition, and that this phenomenon is mediated by neuroendocrine mechanisms involving the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis, brainstem nucleus locus coeruleus and hippocampus.  相似文献   

9.
10.
In mammalian pregnancy the trophoblast normally constitutes an uninterrupted boundary of foetal tissue in immediate contact with maternal tissue, including blood in some species, and is the decisive immunological barrier to rejection of the foetus as an allograft. The ability of the trophoblast to function as a barrier evidently results from its capacity to resist immunological attack by either alloantibody or alloimmune cells and to prevent immunocompetent cells from reaching and damaging the foetus but, as yet, there is no general agreement regarding the means by which it exercises these functions. In view of the dramatic hormonal changes that occur during pregnancy and the undisputed involvement of trophoblast in these endocrine events, the possibility exists of an interaction between the hormones of pregnancy and the immunological phenomena. The present account furnishes evidence that endocrine activity at the maternal surface of the trophoblast, the presumptive site of the immunological frontier between foetus and mother, may be a factor in its local survival at implantation. The placental hormones so far known that are capable of blocking the antigen receptor sites of the mother's lymphocytes and thus preventing the latter from reacting with the foetal antigens are the glycoprotein, human chorionic gonadotrophin (HCG) and the polypeptide hormone, human chorionic somatomammotrophin (HCS) or human placental lactogen (HPL), both of which are specific to the human placenta. The origin of these hormones, their spatial distribution and their probable interaction with placental steroid hormones are discussed. It is argued that the place of highest concentration of these hormones is on the surface of the syncytial microvilli and the adjacent caviolae of the apical plasma membrane, as well as on the surfaces of the persisting cytotrophoblastic cells of the basal plate (cytotrophoblastic shell), the cell islands and the septa-precisely where the immunological challenge of the foetal allograft to the maternal host occurs. An explanation is offered for the continuing production of the voluminous quantities of these hormones during human pregnancy.  相似文献   

11.
Metabolism of sex steroids within the prostate is an important factor affecting its growth and pathology. Mouse models with genetic gain- and especially loss-of-function have characterised different steroid metabolic pathways and their contribution to prostate pathology. With reference to the human prostate, this review aims to summarize the steroidogenic pathways in the mouse prostate as the basis for using the mouse as a model for intraprostatic steroid signalling. In this review we summarize the current information for three main components of the steroid signalling pathway in the mouse prostate: circulating steroids, steroid receptors and steroidogenic enzymes with regard to signalling via androgen, estrogen, progesterone and glucocorticoid pathways. This review reveals many opportunities for characterisation steroid metabolism in various mouse models. The knowledge of steroid metabolism within prostate tissue and in a lobe (rodent)/region (human) specific manner, will give valuable information for future, novel hypotheses of intraprostatic control of steroid actions. This review summarizes knowledge of steroid metabolism in the mouse prostate and its relevance to the human.  相似文献   

12.
We have previously determined that atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) is a potent inhibitor of steroid secretion in cultured bovine zona glomerulosa and fasciculata cells. The present report describes a comparison of the effect produced by ANF on aldosterone, deoxycorticosterone and progesterone secretions by zona glomerulosa cells and on cortisol, corticosterone and progesterone secretions by zona fasciculata cells. The equipotent inhibitory action of ANF on the stimulated secretion of these steroids in both cell types indicates a common site of action prior to progesterone synthesis at which ANF inhibits the steroidogenic pathway.  相似文献   

13.
Glutamine plays a vital role in fetal carbon and nitrogen metabolism and exhibits the highest fetal:maternal plasma ratio among all amino acids in pigs. Such disparate glutamine levels between mother and fetus suggest that glutamine may be actively synthesized and released into the fetal circulation by the porcine placenta. We hypothesized that branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) metabolism in the placenta plays an important role in placental glutamine synthesis. This hypothesis was tested by studying conceptuses from gilts on Days 20, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 60, 90, or 110 of gestation (n = 6 per day). Placental tissue was analyzed for amino acid concentrations, BCAA transport, BCAA degradation, and glutamine synthesis as well as the activities of related enzymes (including BCAA transaminase, branched-chain alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase, glutamine synthetase, glutamate-pyruvate transaminase, and glutaminase). On all days of gestation, rates of BCAA transamination were much greater than rates of branched-chain alpha-ketoacid decarboxylation. The glutamate generated from BCAA transamination was primarily directed to glutamine synthesis and, to a much lesser extent, alanine production. Placental BCAA transport, BCAA transamination, glutamine synthesis, and activities of related enzymes increased markedly between Days 20 and 40 of gestation, as did glutamine in fetal allantoic fluid. Accordingly, placental BCAA levels decreased after Day 20 of gestation in association with a marked increase in BCAA catabolism and concentrations of glutamine. There was no detectable catabolism of glutamine in pig placenta throughout pregnancy, which would ensure maximum output of glutamine by this tissue. These novel results demonstrate glutamine synthesis from BCAAs in pig placentae, aid in explaining the abundance of glutamine in the fetus, and provide valuable insight into the dynamic role of the placenta in fetal metabolism and nutrition.  相似文献   

14.
Leptin in pregnancy: an update   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Leptin influences satiety, adiposity, and metabolism and is associated with mechanisms regulating puberty onset, fertility, and pregnancy in various species. Maternal hyperleptinemia is a hallmark of mammalian pregnancy, although both the roles of leptin and the mechanisms regulating its synthesis appear to be taxa specific. In pregnant humans and nonhuman primates, leptin is produced by both maternal and fetal adipose tissues, as well as by the placental trophoblast. Specific receptors in the uterine endometrium, trophoblast, and fetus facilitate direct effects of the polypeptide on implantation, placental endocrine function, and conceptus development. A soluble isoform of the receptor may be responsible for inducing maternal leptin resistance during pregnancy and/or may facilitate the transplacental passage of leptin for the purpose of directly regulating fetal development. The steroid hormones are linked to the regulation of leptin and the leptin receptor and probably interact with other pregnancy-specific, serum-borne factors to regulate leptin dynamics during pregnancy. In addition to its effects on normal conceptus development, leptin is linked to mechanisms affecting a diverse array of pregnancy-specific pathologies that include preeclampsia, gestational diabetes, and intrauterine growth restriction. Association with these anomalies and with mechanisms pointing to a fetal origin for a range of conditions affecting the individual's health in adult life, such as obesity, diabetes mellitus, and cardiovascular disease, reiterate the need for continued research dedicated to elucidating leptin's roles and regulation throughout gestation.  相似文献   

15.
Human fetal and placental compartments have all the enzymatic systems necessary to produce steroid hormones. However, their activities are different and complementary: the fetus is very active in converting acetate into cholesterol, in transforming pregnanes to androstanes, various hydroxylases, sulfotransferases, whilst all these transformations are absent or very limited in the placenta. This compartment can transform cholesterol to C21-steroids, convert 5-ene to 4-ene steroids, and has a high capacity to aromatize C19 precursors and to hydrolyse sulfates. Steroid hormone receptors are present at an early stage of gestation and are functional for important physiological activities. The production rate of some steroids increases drastically with fetal evolution (e.g. estriol increases 500–1000 times in relation to non-pregnant women). We can hypothesize that the control of active steroid hormones could be carried out by fetal and placental factors, which act by stimulating or inhibiting the enzymes involved in their formation and transformation during pregnancy evolution and, consequently, limiting the high levels of the biologically active hormone.  相似文献   

16.
Recent studies have indicated that maternal skeletal metabolism undergoes significant changes during gestation. The agents that are responsible for eliciting these changes in bone turnover during pregnancy have yet to be defined. We therefore sought to investigate whether chaperonin 10 (Cpn10), a homolog of early-pregnancy factor, or human placental lactogen (PL) were capable of influencing the synthesis of type I collagen by human osteoblasts in vitro. Both Cpn10 and PL are major components of the maternal circulation during pregnancy, but how they might contribute to bone metabolism has not been determined. Type I collagen represents the most abundant component of bone tissue, accounting for approximately 90% of the organic compartment. Both Cpn10 and PL were capable of stimulating the synthesis of type I collagen by human osteoblasts in culture. The inclusion of 17 beta-estradiol or prolactin, however, failed to influence the ability of cells to mobilize type I collagen. These novel findings support a role for PL and Cpn10 in the metabolism of bone tissue during pregnancy. Maternal bone collagen metabolism is clearly an important event during pregnancy, and the identification of the factors responsible will aid our understanding of the regulation of skeletal metabolism during gestation.  相似文献   

17.
The liver of the foetal guinea pig accumulates a large quantity of triacyglycerol late in gestation at the same time that adipose-tissue mass grows at its maximum rate and foetal adipose-tissue lipoprotein lipase activity and sensitivity to lipolytic hormones has substantially declined. The fatty acid for triacyglycerol synthesis is not synthesized in the foetal liver and it is unlikely that it originates from any of the foetal tissues. Before the accumulation of hepatic triacyglycerol the concentration of free fatty acids increases in both the umbilical vein and the maternal inferior vena cava. This occurs at a time when the triacyglycerol lipase activity in maternal adipose tissue is elevated and the rate of lipolysis, but not of fatty acid esterification, is higher than earlier in gestation or than in the non-pregnant state. It is proposed that the increase in lipolysis in maternal adipose tissue, brought about by an increase in circulating lipolytic hormones, mobilizes fatty acid, which passes to the foetus and is partly stored as hepatic triacylglycerol. The foetal liver effectively removes both long-and short-chain fatty acids from umbilical-vein blood. The rate of placental fatty acid transfer is more than adequate to account for the triacylglycerol accumulation.  相似文献   

18.
The immunocytochemical study of the bovine placenta has demonstrated the presence of cells containing alphamelanotropic hormones, in the decidual epithelium, since the 4th month of pregnancy. The number and the staining intensity of those cells grow up with the placental development. Since the 6th month, we observed the immunoreactional presence of cells in the foetal chorionic epithelium.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Tracking the role of a star in the sky of the new millennium.   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The steroidogenic acute regulatory protein is indispensable for the biosynthesis of steroid hormones. Steroidogenic acute regulatory protein mediates the rate-limiting step in steroidogenesis, the transfer of cholesterol from the outer mitochondrial membrane to the inner mitochondrial membrane where it is cleaved to pregnenolone. Its essential role in steroidogenesis was shown when it was discovered that mutations in the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein gene in humans cause the lipoid form of congenital adrenal hyperplasia, a potentially lethal disease resulting from an inability to synthesize steroids. Also, the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein null mouse has a phenotype that is essentially the same as that observed with human mutations. Studies on the regulation of the expression of the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein gene has enjoyed considerable progress, yet the complexity of this regulation indicates that much work remains. The mechanism whereby steroidogenic acute regulatory protein mediates the transfer of cholesterol to the inner mitochondrial membrane remains a mystery, but the recent solving of the structure of the cholesterol transferring domain of a steroidogenic acute regulatory protein homolog coupled with structure-function studies of steroidogenic acute regulatory protein in natural and synthetic membranes has allowed for at least two models to be proposed. This review will briefly attempt to summarize what is currently known about the regulation of the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein gene and its mechanism of action, fully understanding that in both areas considerable gaps in our knowledge remain.  相似文献   

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