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- <html>
- <head><title>Tissue-bound estrogen in aging</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Tissue-bound estrogen in aging
- </h1>
-
- <em><p>
- The "Estrogen Replacement" industry is based on the doctrine that a woman's tissues are depleted of
- estrogen after menopause. This doctrine is false.
- </p>
- <p>
- The concentration of a hormone in the blood doesn't directly represent the concentration in the various
- organs.
- </p>
- <p>
- The amount of estrogen in tissue is decreased when progesterone is abundant. In the absence of
- progesterone, tissues retain estrogen even when there is little estrogen circulating in the blood.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Many things suggest an increased estrogenic activity at menopause. For example, melatonin decreases
- sharply at puberty when estrogen increases, and then it decreases again at menopause. Prolactin
- (stimulated by estrogen) increases around puberty, and instead of decreasing at menopause, it often
- increases, and its increase is associated with osteoporosis and other age-related symptoms.
- </p>
- <p>
- Estrogen is produced in many tissues by the enzyme aromatase, even in the breast and endometrium,
- although these are considered "target tissues" rather than endocrine glands. Aromatase increases with
- aging.
- </p>
- <p>
- Estrogen is inactivated, mainly in the liver and brain, by being made water soluble by the attachment of
- glucuronic acid and/or sulfuric acid.
- </p>
- <p>
- Estrogen's concentration in a particular tissue depends on many things, including its affinity or
- binding strength for components of that tissue, relative to its affinity for the blood; the activity in
- that tissue of the aromatase enzyme, which converts androgens to estrogen; the activity of the
- glucuronidase enzyme, that converts water-soluble estrogen glucuronides into the oil soluble active
- forms of estrogen; and the sulfatases and several other enzymes that modify the activity and solubility
- of the estrogens. The "estrogen receptors," proteins which bind estrogens in cells, are inactivated by
- progesterone, and activated by many physical and chemical conditions.
- </p>
- <p>
- Inflammation activates beta-glucuronidase, and antiinflammatory substances such as aspirin reduce many
- of estrogen's effects.
- </p></em>
-
- <hr />
-
- <p>
- Doctrines are admitted into the "scientific canon" by those who have the power of censorship. In astronomy,
- Halton Arp's discovery of "anomalous" galactic red-shifts is practically unknown, because the journal
- editors say the observations are "just anomalies," or that the theories which could explain them are
- unconventional; but the actual problem is that they are strong evidence against The Big Bang, Hubble's Law,
- and the Expanding Universe. American science, since the 1940s, has probably been the most censored and
- doctrinaire in the world.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gilbert Ling's revolution in cell biology remains outside the canon, despite the profound influence of MRI,
- which grew directly out of his view of the cell, because his work provided conclusive evidence that cells
- are not regulated by "semipermeable membranes and membrane pumps." Every field of science is ruled by a
- doctrinaire establishment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Charles E. Brown-S"quard (1817-94) was a physiologist who pioneered scientific endocrinology, but who was
- ridiculed because of his claim that extracts of animal glands had an invigorating effect when injected. His
- place in the scientific canon is mainly as an object of ridicule, and the details of his case are perfectly
- representative of the way our "canon" has been constructed. The argument for dismissing his observations was
- that he used a water extract of testicles, and, according to the 20th century American biologists,
- testosterone is not water soluble, and so the water extract would have "contained no hormone." The argument
- is foolish, because living organs contain innumerable substances that will solublize oily molecules, but
- also because Brown-Sequard was describing an effect that wasn"t necessarily limited to a single chemical
- substance. (The transplanting of living cells to repair tissues is finally being accepted, but the pioneers
- in promoting tissue regeneration or repair with the transplantation of living, dead, or stressed cells--V.
- Filatov, L.V. Polezhaev, W.T. Summerlin, for example--were simply written out of history.)
- </p>
- <p>
- If Brown-S"quard"s extract couldn"t work because testosterone isn"t soluble in water, then what are we to
- think of the thousands of medical publications that talk about "free hormones" as the only active hormones?
- ("Free hormone" is defined as the hormone that isn"t bound to a transporting protein, with the more or less
- explicit idea that it is dissolved in the water of the plasma or extracellular fluid.) Brown-S"quard"s
- tissue extracts would have contained solublizing substances including proteins and phospholipids, so the
- oily hormones would certainly be present (and active) in his extracts. But the thousands of people who
- ridiculed him committed themselves to the fact that steroid hormones are insoluble in water. By their own
- standard, they are selling an impossibility when they do calculations to reveal the amount of "free
- hormone," as something distinct from the protein bound hormone, in the patient"s blood.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The immense Hormone Replacement Therapy industry--which Brown-S"quard"s experiments foreshadowed--is based
- on the fact that the concentrations of some hormones in the blood serum decrease with aging.
- </p>
- <p>
- At first, it was assumed that the amount of the hormone in the blood corresponded to the effectiveness of
- that hormone. Whatever was in the blood was being delivered to the "target tissues." But as the idea of
- measuring "protein bound iodine" (PBI) to determine thyroid function came into disrepute (because it never
- had a scientific basis at all), new ideas of measuring "active hormones" came into the marketplace, and
- currently the doctrine is that the "bound" hormones are inactive, and the active hormones are "free." The
- "free" hormones are supposed to be the only ones that can get into the cells to deliver their signals, but
- the problem is that "free hormones" exist only in the imagination of people who interpret certain lab tests,
- as I discussed in the newsletter on thyroid tests (May, 2000).
- </p>
- <p>
- In the 1960s and 1970s, when the PBI test was disappearing, there was intense interest in--a kind of mania
- regarding--the role of "membranes" in regulating cell functions, and the membrane was still seen by most
- biologists as the "semipermeable membrane" which, "obviously," would exclude molecules as large as albumin
- and the other proteins that carry thyroid and other hormones in the blood. (In reality, and experimental
- observations, albumin and other proteins enter cells more or less freely, depending on prevailing
- conditions.) The membrane doctrine led directly to the "free hormone" doctrine.
- </p>
- <p>
- This issue, of arguing about which form of a hormone is the "active" form, has to do with explaining how
- much of the blood-carried hormone is going to get into the "target tissues." If the membrane is a
- "semipermeable" barrier to molecules such as hormones, then specific receptors and transporters will be
- needed. If the concentration of a hormone inside the cell is higher than that in the blood, a "pump" will
- usually be invoked, to produce an "active transport" of the hormone against its concentration gradient.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>But if the membrane regulates the passage of hormones from blood to tissue cells, and especially if
- pumps are needed to move the hormone into the cell, how relevant is the measurement of hormones in the
- blood?</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Within the blood, progesterone and thyroid hormone (T3) are much more concentrated in the red blood cells
- than in the serum. Since it isn"t likely that red blood cells are "targets" for the sex hormones, or for
- progesterone or even thyroid, their concentration "against their gradient" in these cells suggests that a
- simple distribution by solubility is involved. Oily substances just naturally tend to concentrate inside
- cells because of their insolubility in the watery environment of the plasma and extracellular fluid.
- Proteins that have "oily" regions effectively bind oily molecules, such as fats and steroids. Even red blood
- cells have such proteins.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- In the case of oil soluble molecules, such as progesterone and estrogen, it"s important to explain that most
- of their "binding" to proteins or other oil-loving molecules is really the nearly passive consequence of the
- molecules" being forced away from the watery phase--they are hydrophobic, and although it would take a great
- amount of energy to make these insoluble substances enter the watery phase, the attractive force between
- them and the cell is usually small. This means that they can be freely mobile, while "bound" or concentrated
- within the cell. The oxygen atoms, and especially the phenolic group of estrogen, slightly reduce the
- hormones" affinity for simple oils, but they interact with other polar or aromatic groups, giving estrogen
- the ability to bind more strongly and specifically with some proteins and other molecules. Enzymes which
- catalyze estrogen"s oxidation-reduction actions are among the specific estrogen-binding proteins.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many proteins and lipoproteins bind steroids, but some intracellular proteins bind them so strongly that
- they have been--in a very teleological, if not anthropomorphic, way--considered as the switch by which the
- hormone turns on the cellular response. In the popular doctrine of the Estrogen Receptor, a few molecules of
- estrogen bind to the receptors, which carry them to the nucleus of the cell, where the activated receptors
- turn on the genes in charge of the female response. (Or the male response, or the growth response, or the
- atrophy response, or whatever genetic response estrogen is producing.) Once the switch has been thrown, the
- estrogen molecules have fulfilled their hormonal duty, and must get lost, so that the response isn"t
- perpetuated indefinitely by a few molecules.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although the Estrogen Receptor doctrine is worse than silly, there are real proteins which bind estrogen,
- and some of these are called receptors. The uterus, breast, and brain, which are very responsive to
- estrogen, bind, or concentrate, estrogen molecules.
- </p>
- <p>
- When I was working on my dissertation, I tried to extract estrogens from hamster uteri, but the chemical
- techniques I was using to measure estrogen weren"t accurate for such small quantities. A few years later, S.
- Batra was able to extract the estrogen from human tissue in quantities large enough for accurate analysis by
- radioimmunoassay. (Batra, 1976.)
- </p>
- <p>
- His crucial observation was that the difference in estrogen concentration between tissue and blood was
- lowest in the luteal phase, when progesterone is high:
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong>"The tissue/plasma ratio of E2 [estradiol] ranged from</strong>
- <strong>1.45 to 20.36 with very high values in early follicular phase and the lowest in mid-luteal
- phase."</strong> This means that progesterone prevents the tissue from concentrating estrogen. He made
- similar observations during pregnancy, <strong>
- with tissue estrogen decreasing as blood progesterone increased, so that</strong>
- <strong>there is less estrogen in the tissue than in the plasma.</strong>
- But in women who aren"t pregnant, and when their progesterone is low, the tissues may contain 20 to 30 times
- more estrogen than the plasma (in equal volumes).
- </p>
- <p>
- In aging, the sharply decreased progesterone production creates a situation resembling the follicular phase
- of the menstrual cycle, allowing tissues to concentrate estrogen even when the serum estrogen may be low.
- </p>
- <p>
- "<strong>In postmenopausal women, the tissue concentration of E2 was not significantly lower than in
- menstruating women in follicular phase. . . .</strong>" (Akerlund, et al., 1981.)
- </p>
- <p>
- Besides the relatively direct actions of progesterone on the estrogen receptors, keeping their concentration
- low, and its indirect action by preventing prolactin from stimulating the formation of estrogen receptors,
- there are many other processes that can increase or decrease the tissue concentration of estrogen, and many
- of these influences change with aging.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- There are two kinds of enzyme that produce estrogen. Aromatase converts male hormones into estrogen.
- Beta-glucuronidase converts the inactive estrogen-glucuronides into active estrogen. The healthy liver
- inactivates practically all the estrogen that reaches it, mostly by combining it with the "sugar acid,"
- glucuronic acid. This makes the estrogen water soluble, and it is quickly eliminated in the urine. But when
- it passes through inflamed tissue, these tissues contain large amounts of beta-glucuronidase, which will
- remove the glucuronic acid, leaving the pure estrogen to accumulate in the tissue.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many kinds of liver impairment decrease its ability to excrete estrogen, and estrogen contributes to a
- variety of liver diseases. The work of the Biskinds in the 1940s showed that a dietary protein deficiency
- prevented the liver from detoxifying estrogen. Hypothyroidism prevents the liver from attaching glucuronic
- acid to estrogen, and so increases the body"s retention of estrogen, which in turn impairs the thyroid
- gland"s ability to secrete thyroid hormone. Hypothyroidism often results from nutritional protein
- deficiency.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although we commonly think of the ovaries as the main source of estrogen, the enzyme which makes it can be
- found in all parts of the body. Surprisingly, in rhesus monkeys, aromatase in the arms accounts for a very
- large part of estrogen production. Fat and the skin are major sources of estrogen, especially in older
- people. <strong>The activity of aromatase increases with aging, and under the influence of prolactin,
- cortisol, prostaglandin, and the pituitary hormones, FSH (follicle stimulating hormone) and growth
- hormone.</strong>
- <strong>It is inhibited by progesterone, thyroid, aspirin, and high altitude.</strong>
- Aromatase can produce estrogen in fat cells, fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells, breast and uterine tissue,
- pancreas, liver, brain, bone, skin, etc. Its action in breast cancer, endometriosis, uterine cancer, lupus,
- gynecomastia, and many other diseases is especially important. Aromatase in mammary tissue appears to
- increase estrogen receptors and cause breast neoplasia, independently of ovarian estrogen (Tekmal, et al.,
- 1999).
- </p>
- <p>
- Women who have had their ovaries removed are usually told that they need to take estrogen, but animal
- experiments consistently show that removal of the gonads causes the tissue aromatases to increase. The loss
- of progesterone and ovarian androgens is probably responsible for this generalized increase in the formation
- of estrogen. In the brain, aromatase increases under the influence of estrogen treatment.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Sulfatase is another enzyme that releases estrogen in tissues, and its activity is inhibited by
- antiestrogenic hormones.
- </p>
- <p>
- In at least some tissues, progesterone inhibits the release or activation of beta-glucuronidase (which,
- according to Cristofalo and Kabakjian, 1975, increases with aging). Glucaric acid, which inhibits this
- enzyme, is being used to treat breast cancer, and glucuronic acid also tends to inhibit the intracellular
- release of estrogen by beta-glucuronidase.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although there is clearly a trend toward the rational use of antiestrogenic treatments for breast cancer, in
- other diseases the myth of estrogen deficiency still prevents even rudimentary approaches.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ever since Lipshutz" work in the 1940s, it has been established that the <strong><em>
- uninterrupted</em></strong> effect of a little estrogen is more harmful than larger but intermittent
- exposures. But after menopause, when progesterone stops its cyclic displacement of estrogen from the
- tissues, the tissues retain large amounts of estrogen continuously.
- </p>
- <p>
- The menopause itself is produced by the prolonged exposure to estrogen beginning in puberty, in spite of the
- monthly protection of the progesterone produced by cycling ovaries. The unopposed action of the high
- concentration of tissue-bound estrogen after menopause must be even more harmful.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- The decline of the antiestrogenic factors in aging, combined with the increase of pro-estrogenic factors
- such as cortisol and prolactin and FSH, occurs in both men and women. During the reproductive years, women"s
- cyclic production of large amounts of progesterone probably retards their aging enough to account for their
- greater longevity. Childbearing also has a residual antiestrogenic effect and is associated with increased
- longevity.
- </p>
- <p>
- Being aware of this pervasive increase in estrogen exposure with aging should make it possible to marshal a
- comprehensive set of methods for opposing that trend toward degeneration.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Contraception 1981 Apr;23(4):447-55. <strong>Comparison of plasma and myometrial tissue concentrations of
- estradiol-17 beta and progesterone in nonpregnant women.</strong> Akerlund M, Batra S, Helm G Plasma and
- myometrial tissue concentrations of estradiol (E2) and progesterone (P) were measured by radioimmunoassay
- techniques in samples obtained from women with regular menstrual cycles and from women in pre- <strong>or
- postmenopausal age.</strong> In women with regular cycles, the tissue concentration of E2 ranged from
- 0.13 to 1.06 ng/g wet weight, with significantly higher levels around ovulation than in follicular or luteal
- phases of the cycle. The tissue concentration of P ranged from 2.06 to 14.85 ng/g wet weight with
- significantly higher level in luteal phase than in follicular phase. The tissue/plasma ratio of E2 ranged
- from <strong>1.45 to 20.36 with very high values in early follicular phase and the lowest in mid-luteal
- phase.</strong> The ratio for P ranged from 0.54 to 23.7 and was significantly lower in the luteal phase
- than in other phases of the cycle. One woman in premenopausal age with an ovarian cyst was the only case
- with<strong>
- a tissue/plasma ratio of E2 Less Than 1, since her plasma E2 levels were exceptionally high. In
- </strong>
- <strong>postmenopausal women, the tissue concentration of E2 was not significantly lower than in
- menstruating women in follicular phase, and the tissue concentration of P was not significantly lower
- than in fertile women in any of the phases.</strong> Neither in these women nor in menstruating women
- was there <strong>
- a close correlation between tissue and plasma levels.
- </strong>
- The present data indicate that the myometrial uptake capacity for ovarian steroids may be saturated, <strong
- >and also that a certain amount of these steroids is bound to tissue even if plasma levels are low.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Biokhimiia 1984 Aug;49(8):1350-6. <strong>[The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Translocation of thyroid
- hormones through plasma membranes].</strong> Azimova ShS, Umarova GD, Petrova OS, Tukhtaev KR,
- Abdukarimov A<strong>
- The in vivo translocation of thyroxine-binding blood serum prealbumin (TBPA) was studied. It was found
- that the TBPA-hormone complex penetrates-through the plasma membrane into the cytoplasm of target cells.
- Electron microscopic autoradiography revealed that blood serum TBPA is localized in ribosomes of target
- cells as well as in mitochondria, lipid droplets and Golgi complex. Negligible amounts of the
- translocated TBPA is localized in lysosomes of the cells insensitive to thyroid
- </strong>hormones (spleen macrophages). Study of T4- and T3-binding proteins from rat liver cytoplasm
- demonstrated that one of them has the antigenic determinants common with those of TBPA. It was shown
- autoimmunoradiographically that the structure of TBPA is not altered during its translocation.
- </p>
- <p>
- <strong> </strong>
- Biokhimiia 1985 Nov;50(11):1926-32.<strong>
- [The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Intracellular functions of thyroxine-binding
- prealbumin</strong>] Azimova ShS; Normatov K; Umarova GD; Kalontarov AI; Makhmudova AA The effect of
- tyroxin-binding prealbumin (TBPA) of blood serum on the template activity of chromatin was studied. It was
- found that the values of binding constants of TBPA for T3 and T4 are 2 X 10(-11) M and 5 X 10(-10) M,
- respectively. The receptors isolated from 0.4 M KCl extract <strong>of chromatin and mitochondria as well as
- hormone-bound TBPA cause similar effects</strong> on the template activity of chromatin. Based on
- experimental results and the previously published comparative data on the structure of TBPA, nuclear,
- cytoplasmic and mitochondrial receptors of thyroid hormones as well as on <strong>translocation across the
- plasma membrane and intracellular transport of TBPA, a conclusion was drawn, which suggested that TBPA
- is the "core" of the true thyroid hormone receptor. It was shown that T3-bound TBPA caused histone
- H1-dependent conformational changes in chromatin.</strong> Based on the studies with the interaction of
- the TBPA-T3 complex with spin-labeled chromatin, a scheme of functioning of the thyroid hormone nuclear
- receptor was proposed.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Biokhimiia 1984 Sep;49(9):1478-85<strong>[The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Thyroxine- and
- triiodothyronine-binding proteins of mitochondria]</strong>
- Azimova ShS; Umarova GD; Petrova OS; Tukhtaev KR; Abdukarimov A. T4- and T3-binding proteins of rat liver
- were studied. It was found that the external mitochondrial membranes and matrix contain a protein whose
- electrophoretic mobility is similar to that of thyroxine-binding blood serum prealbumin (TBPA) and which
- binds either T4 or T3. This protein is precipitated by monospecific antibodies against TBPA. The internal
- mitochondrial membrane has two proteins able to bind thyroid hormones, one of which is localized in the
- cathode part of the gel and binds only T3, while the second one capable of binding T4 rather than T3 and
- possessing the electrophoretic mobility similar to that of TBPA. Radioimmunoprecipitation with monospecific
- antibodies against TBPA revealed that this protein also the antigenic determinants common with those of
- TBPA. The in vivo translocation of 125I-TBPA into submitochondrial fractions was studied. The analysis of
- densitograms of submitochondrial protein fraction showed that both TBPA and hormones are localized in
- <strong>the same protein fractions. Electron microscopic autoradiography demonstrated that 125I-TBPA enters
- the cytoplasm through the external membrane and is localized on the internal mitochondrial membrane and
- matrix.
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Biokhimiia 1984 Aug;49(8):1350-6<strong>. [The nature of thyroid hormone receptors. Translocation of thyroid
- hormones through plasma membranes]</strong> Azimova ShS; Umarova GD; Petrova OS; Tukhtaev KR;
- Abdukarimov A The in vivo translocation of thyroxine-binding blood serum prealbumin (TBPA) was studied. It
- was found that the TBPA-hormone complex penetrates-through the plasma membrane into the cytoplasm of target
- cells. Electron microscopic autoradiography revealed that blood serum TBPA is localized in ribosomes of
- target cells as well as in mitochondria, lipid droplets and Golgi complex. Negligible amounts of the
- translocated TBPA is localized in lysosomes of the cells insensitive to thyroid hormones (spleen
- macrophages). Study of T4- and T3-binding proteins from rat liver cytoplasm demonstrated that one of them
- has the antigenic determinants common with those of TBPA. It was shown autoimmunoradiographically that the
- structure of TBPA is not altered during its translocation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Probl Endokrinol (Mosk), 1981 Mar-Apr, 27:2, 48-52.<strong>
- [Blood estradiol level and G2-chalone content in the vaginal mucosa in rats of different ages]</strong>
- Anisimov VN; Okulov VB. <strong>"17 beta-Estradiol level was higher in the blood serum of rats aged 14 to 16
- months with regular estral cycles during all the phases as compared to that in 3- to 4-month-old female
- rats.
- </strong>
-
- The latter ones had a higher vaginal mucosa G2-chalone concentration. The level of the vaginal mucosa
- G2-chalone decreased in young rats 12 hours after subcutaneous benzoate-estradiol injection<strong>. . .
- .</strong>". "Possible role of age-associated disturbances of the <strong>regulatory cell proliferation
- stimulant (estrogen) and its inhibitor (chalone) interactions in neoplastic target tissue transformation
- is discussed."</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 1979 Dec;11(6):603-10. <strong>Interrelations between plasma and tissue concentrations
- of 17 beta-oestradiol and progesterone during human pregnancy.</strong> Batra S, Bengtsson LP, Sjoberg
- NO Oestradiol and progesterone concentration in plasma, decidua, myometrium and placenta obtained from women
- undergoing Caesarian section at term and abortion at weeks 16-22 of pregnancy were determined. There was a
- significant increase in oestradiol concentration (per g wet wt) both in placenta, decidua and myometrium
- from mid-term to term. <strong>Both at mid-term and term oestradiol concentrations in decidua and myometrium
- were much smaller than those in the plasma (per ml).</strong>
- Progesterone concentration in placenta and in myometrium did not increase from mid-term to term where it
- increased significantly in decidua. <strong>
- Decidual and myometrial progesterone concentrations at mid-term were 2-3 times higher than those in
- plasma,
- </strong>
-
- but at term the concentrations in both these tissues were lower than in plasma. The ratio <strong
- >progesterone/oestradiol in plasma, decidua, myometrium and placenta at mid-term was 8.7, 112.2, 61.4 and
- 370.0,</strong> respectively, and it decreased significantly in the myometrium and placenta but was
- nearly unchanged in plasma and decidua at term. The general conclusion to be drawn from the present study is
- <strong>the lack of correspondence between the plasma concentrations and the tissue concentrations of female
- sex steroids during pregnancy.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Endocrinology 1976 Nov; 99(5): 1178-81. <strong>Unconjugated estradiol in the myometrium of
- pregnancy.</strong> Batra S. By chemically digesting myometrium in a mixture of NaOH and sodium dodecyl
- sulphate, estradiol could be recovered almost completely by extraction with ethyl acetate. The concentration
- of estradiol-17beta (E2) in the extracted samples could reliably be determined by radioimmunoassay. Compared
- to its concentration in the plasma, E2 in the pregnant human myometrium was very low, and as a result, the
- tissue/plasma estradiol concentration ratio was less than 0.5. In the pseudopregnant rabbit, this ratio
- ranged between 16 and 20.
- </p>
- <p>
- J Steroid Biochem 1989 Jan;32(1A):35-9. <strong>Tissue specific effects of progesterone on progesterone and
- estrogen receptors in the female urogenital tract.</strong> Batra S, Iosif CS. The effect of
- progesterone administration on progesterone and estrogen receptors in the uterus, vagina and urethra of
- rabbits was studied. After 24 h of<strong>
- progesterone treatment the concentration of cytosolic progesterone receptors decreased to about 25% of
- the control value in the uterus, whereas no significant change in receptor concentration was observed in
- the vagina or the urethra. The concentration of the nuclear progesterone receptor did not change in any
- of the three tissues studied. The apparent dissociation constant (Kd) of nuclear progesterone receptor
- increased after progesterone treatment in all</strong> three tissues. Although the Kd of the cytosolic
- progesterone receptor also increased in all tissues, the difference was significant for only the vagina
- and<strong>
- urethra. The concentration of cytosolic estrogen receptors in the uterus decreased significantly (P less
- than 0.001) after progesterone treatment whereas the Kd value increased slightly (P less than 0.05). In
- vagina or the urethra,</strong>
-
- there was no change in either estrogen receptor concentration or Kd values after progesterone treatment.
- These data clearly showed that the reduction by progesterone of progesterone and estrogen receptor
- concentrations occurs only in the uterus and not in the vagina or the urethra.
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Obstet Gynecol 1980 Apr 15;136(8):986-91. <strong>Female sex steroid concentrations in the ampullary
- and isthmic regions of the human fallopian tube and their relationship to plasma concentrations during
- the menstrual cycle.</strong>
- Batra S, Helm G, Owman C, Sjoberg NO, Walles B. The concentrations of estradiol-17 beta (E2) and
- progesterone (P) were measured in the ampullary and isthmic portions of the fallopian tube of nonpregnant
- menstruating women and the cyclic fluctuations were related to the concentrations of these hormones in
- plasma. The steroid concentrations were determined by radioimmunoassays. There was no significant difference
- in the isthmic and ampullary concentrations of either steroid in any of the menstrual phases. The mean value
- for E2 was highest in the ovulatory phase and for P during the luteal phase. The tissue (per gm)/plasma (per
- ml) ratio for the steroid concentrations was above unity in all measurements. The ratio for E2 was highest
- (isthmus:12, ampulla:8) in the follicular phase and for P (isthmus:26, ampulla:18) during ovulation. Since
- <strong>
- these highest ratios were attained when plasma steroid concentrations were relatively low they were
- interpreted as reflections of a maximal receptor contribution.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Biol Reprod 1980 Apr;22(3):430-7.<strong>
- Sex steroids in plasma and reproductive tissues of the female guinea pig.</strong> Batra S, Sjoberg NO,
- Thorbert G.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1997 Apr;61(3-6):323-39.<strong>
- Steroid control and sexual differentiation of brain aromatase.</strong> Balthazart J. "Together, these
- data indicate that <strong>
- the removal of estrogens caused by steroidal inhibitors decreases the synthesis of ARO,</strong>
- presumably at the transcriptional level."
- </p>
- <p>
- Science, Vol. 94, No. 2446 (Nov. 1941), p. 462. <strong>Diminution in Ability of the Liver to Inactivate
- Estrone in Vitamin B Complex Deficiency,</strong> Biskind, M.S., and G. R. Biskind.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Am. Jour. Clin. Path., Vol. 16 (1946), No. 12, pages 737-45.<strong>
- The Nutritional Aspects of Certain Endocrine Disturbances,</strong> Biskind, G. R., and M. S.
- Biskind.<strong> </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Biol Reprod, 1993 Oct, 49:4, 647-52<strong>. Pathologic effect of estradiol on the hypothalamus.</strong>
- Brawer JR; Beaudet A; Desjardins GC; Schipper HM. Estradiol provides physiological signals to the brain
- throughout life that are indispensable for the development and regulation of reproductive function. In
- addition to its multiple physiological actions, we have shown that estradiol is also selectively cytotoxic
- to beta-endorphin neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. The mechanism underlying this neurotoxic
- action appears to involve the conversion of estradiol to catechol estrogen and subsequent oxidation to
- o-semiquinone free radicals. The estradiol-induced loss of beta-endorphin neurons engenders a compensatory
- increment in mu opioid binding in the medial preoptic area rendering this region supersensitive to residual
- beta-endorphin or to other endogenous opioids. The consequent persistent opioid inhibition results in a
- cascade of neuroendocrine deficits that are ultimately expressed as a chronically attenuated plasma LH
- pattern to which the ovaries respond by becoming anovulatory and polycystic. This neurotoxic action of
- estradiol may contribute to a number of reproductive disorders in humans and in animals in which aberrant
- hypothalamic function is a major component.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mech Ageing Dev, 1991 May, 58:2-3, 207-20. <strong>Exposure to estradiol impairs luteinizing hormone
- function during aging.</strong> Collins TJ; Parkening TA Department of Anatomy and Neurosciences,
- University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston 77550. "This work evaluated the anterior pituitary (AP)
- component of the H-P axis by determining the ability of perifused AP to release LH following sustained but
- pulsatile LHRH stimulation. The normal dual discharge profile of LH was affected by age." <strong>"The role
- of estradiol (E2) in AP aging was further tested as AP from ovariectomized (OVXed) mice, deprived of E2
- since puberty, responded as well as the mature proestrous group. In contrast, aged mice subjected to
- long-term E2 exposure (cycling or OVXed plus E2 replacement) failed to produce the dual response
- pa</strong>ttern." "Furthermore, <strong>E2 is a major factor in altering LH function and appears to act
- before middle age."</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Mech Ageing Dev 1975 Jan-Feb;4(1):19-28. <strong>Lysosomal enzymes and aging in vitro: subcellular enzyme
- distribution and effect of hydrocortisone on cell life-span.</strong> Cristofalo VJ, Kabakjian J. "The
- acid phosphatase and beta glucuronidase activities of four subcellular fractions (nuclear,
- mitochondrial-lysosomal, microsomal, supernatant) of WI-38 cells were compared during in vitro aging.
- A<strong>ll of the fractions showed an age-associated increase in activity.</strong>"
- </p>
- <p>
- Endocrinology, 1992 Nov, 131:5, 2482-4.<strong>
- Vitamin E protects hypothalamic beta-endorphin neurons from estradiol neurotoxicity.</strong> Desjardins
- GC; Beaudet A; Schipper HM; Brawer JR. Estradiol valerate (EV) treatment has been shown to result in the
- destruction of 60% of beta-endorphin neurons in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. Evidence suggests that the
- mechanism of EV-induced neurotoxicity involves the conversion of estradiol to catechol estrogen and
- subsequent oxidation to free radicals in local peroxidase-positive astrocytes. In this study, we examined
- whether treatment with the antioxidant, vitamin E, protects beta-endorphin neurons from the neurotoxic
- action of estradiol. Our results demonstrate that chronic vitamin E treatment prevents the decrement in
- hypothalamic beta-endorphin concentrations resulting from arcuate beta-endorphin cell loss, suggesting that
- the latter is mediated by free radicals. Vitamin E treatment also prevented the onset of persistent vaginal
- cornification and polycystic ovarian condition which have been shown to result from the EV-induced
- hypothalamic pathology.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Exp Gerontol, 1995 May-Aug, 30:3-4, 253-67.<strong>
- Estrogen-induced hypothalamic beta-endorphin neuron loss: a possible model of hypothalamic
- aging.</strong>
- Desjardins GC; Beaudet A; Meaney MJ; Brawer JR. Over the course of normal aging, all female mammals with
- regular cycles display an irreversible arrest of cyclicity at mid-life. Males, in contrast, exhibit
- gametogenesis until death.<strong>
- Although it is widely accepted that exposure to estradiol throughout life contributes to reproductive
- aging, a unified hypothesis of the role of estradiol in reproductive senescence has yet to
- emerge.</strong> Recent evidence derived from a rodent model of chronic estradiol-mediated accelerated
- reproductive senescence now suggests such a hypothesis. It has been shown that chronic estradiol exposure
- results in the <strong>destruction of greater than 60% of all beta-endorphin neurons in the arcuate nucleus
- </strong>
- while leaving other neuronal populations spared. This loss of opioid neurons is prevented by treatment with
- antioxidants indicating that it results from <strong>estradiol-induced formation of free radicals.
- Furthermore, we have shown that this beta-endorphin cell loss is followed by a compensatory upregulation
- of mu opioid receptors in the vicinity of LHRH cell bodies.</strong> The increment in mu opioid
- receptors presumably renders the opioid target cells supersensitive to either residual beta-endorphin or
- other endogenous mu ligands, such as met-enkephalin, thus resulting in chronic opioid <strong>suppression of
- the pattern of LHRH release, and subsequently that of LH.</strong> Indeed, prevention of the
- neuroendocrine effects of estradiol by antioxidant treatment also <strong>prevents the cascade of
- neuroendocrine aberrations resulting in anovulatory acyclicity.</strong> The loss of beta-endorphin
- neurons along with the paradoxical opioid supersensitivity which ensues, provides a unifying framework in
- which to interpret the diverse features that characterize the reproductively senescent female.
- </p>
- <p>
- Geburtshilfe Frauenheilkd 1994 Jun; 54(6):321-31.<strong>
- Hormonprofile bei hochbetagten Frauen und potentielle Einflussfaktoren.</strong> Eggert-Kruse W; Kruse
- W; Rohr G; Muller S; Kreissler-Haag D; Klinga K; Runnebaum B. <strong>[Hormone profile of elderly women and
- potential modifiers].
- </strong>
- Eggert-Kruse W, Kruse W, Rohr G, Muller S, Kreissler-Haag D, Klinga K, Runnebaum B. "In 136 women with a
- median age of 78 (60-98) years the serum concentrations of FSH, LH, prolactin, estradiol-17 beta,
- testosterone and DHEA-S were determined completed by GnRH and ACTH stimulation tests in a subgroup. This
- resulted in median values for FSH of 15.8 ng/ml, LH 6.4 ng/ml, prolactin 6.9 ng/ml, estradiol 16 pg/ml,
- testosterone 270 pg/ml and 306 ng/ml for DHEA-S. <strong>No correlation with age in this population was
- found for gonadotropins as well as the other hormones for an age level of up to 98 years."</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Acta Physiol Hung 1985;65(4):473-8. <strong>Peripheral blood concentrations of progesterone and oestradiol
- during human pregnancy and delivery.</strong>
-
- Kauppila A, Jarvinen PA To evaluate the significance of progesterone and estradiol in human uterine activity
- during pregnancy and delivery the blood concentrations of these hormones were monitored weekly during the
- last trimester of pregnancy and at the onset of labour in 15 women, and before and 3 hours after the
- induction of term delivery in 83 parturients. Neither plasma concentrations of progesterone or estradiol nor
- the ratio of progesterone to estradiol changed significantly during the last trimester of pregnancy or at
- the onset of delivery. After the<strong>
- induction of delivery parturients with initial progesterone dominance (ratio of progesterone to
- estradiol higher than 5 before induction) demonstrated a significant fall in serum concentration of
- progesterone and in the ratio of progesterone to estradiol while estradiol concentration rose
- significantly. In estrogen dominant women (progesterone to estradiol ratio equal to or lower than 5) the
- serum concentration of progesterone and the ratio of progesterone to</strong> estradiol rose
- significantly during the 3 hours after the induction of delivery. Our results suggest that the peripheral
- blood levels of progesterone and estradiol do not correlate with the tissue biochemical changes which
- prepare the uterine cervix and myometrium for delivery. The observation that the ratio of progesterone to
- estradiol decreased in progesterone-dominant and increased in estrogen-dominant women stresses the
- importance of a well balanced equilibrium of these hormones for prostaglandin metabolism during human
- delivery.
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Obstet Gynecol 1984 Nov 1;150(5 Pt 1):501-5. <strong>Estrogen and progesterone receptor and hormone
- levels in human myometrium and placenta in term pregnancy.</strong> Khan-Dawood FS, Dawood MY. Estradiol
- and progesterone receptors in the myometrium, decidua, placenta, chorion, and amnion of eight women who
- underwent elective cesarean section at term were determined by means of an exchange assay. The hormone
- levels in the peripheral plasma and cytosol of these tissues were measured by radioimmunoassays. Maternal
- plasma and the placenta had high concentrations of estradiol and progesterone, with the placenta having 12
- times more progesterone<strong>
- than in maternal plasma but only half the concentrations of estradiol in</strong> maternal plasma. The
- decidua and placenta had detectable levels of cytosol and nuclear estradiol receptors, but the myometrium
- had no measurable cytosol estradiol receptors, <strong>
- whereas the chorion and amnion had neither cytosol nor nuclear estradiol receptors. However, the chorion
- and amnion had significantly higher concentrations of estradiol</strong> in the cytosol than those in
- the decidua and myometrium. Only the decidua and myometrium had cytosol and nuclear progesterone receptors,
- but the placenta, amnion, and chorion had neither cytosol nor nuclear progesterone receptors. In contrast,
- progesterone hormone levels were significantly higher in the placenta, amnion, and chorion than in the
- decidua and myometrium. The findings indicate that, in the term pregnant uterus, (1) the placenta, amnion,
- and chorion are rich in progesterone, estradiol, and nuclear estradiol receptors but have no progesterone
- receptors, (2) the decidua and myometrium have nuclear estradiol and progesterone receptors, and (3) <strong
- >the myometrium has a higher progesterone/estradiol ratio than that of the peripheral plasma, thus
- suggesting a highly progesterone-dominated uterus.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Biochem Biophys Res Commun 1982 Jan 29;104(2):570-6. <strong>Progesterone-induced inactivation of nuclear
- estrogen receptor in the hamster uterus is mediated by acid phosphatase.</strong> MacDonald RG, Okulicz
- WC, Leavitt, W.W.
- </p>
- <p>
- Steroids 1982 Oct;40(4):465-73. <strong>Progesterone-induced estrogen receptor-regulatory factor is not 17
- beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase.</strong> MacDonald RG, Gianferrari EA, Leavitt WW These studies were
- done to determine if the progesterone-induced estrogen receptor-regulatory factor (ReRF) in hamster uterus
- is 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17 beta-HSD), i.e. that rapid loss of nuclear estrogen receptor
- (Re) might be due to enhanced estradiol oxidation to estrone catalyzed by 17 beta-HSD. Treatment of
- proestrous hamsters with progesterone (approximately 25 mg/kg BW) for either 2 h or 4 h had no effect on 17
- beta-HSD activity measured as the rate of conversion of [6,7-3H]estradiol to [3H]estrone by whole uterine
- homogenates at 35 degrees C. During this same time interval, progesterone treatment increased the rate of
- inactivation of the occupied form of nuclear Re as determined during a 30 min incubation of uterine nuclear
- extract in vitro at 36 degrees C. Since we previously demonstrated that such in vitro Re-inactivating
- activity represents ReRF, the present studies show that ReRF is not 17 beta-HSD or a modifier of that
- enzyme.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Am J Obstet Gynecol 1987 Aug; 157(2):312-317. <strong>Age-related changes in the female hormonal environment
- during reproductive life.</strong> Musey VC, Collins DC, Musey PI, Martino-Saltzman D, Preedy JR
- Previous studies have indicated that serum levels of follicle-stimulating hormone rise with age during the
- female reproductive life, but the effect on other hormones is not clear. We studied the effects of age,
- independent of pregnancy, by comparing serum hormone levels in two groups of nulliparous, <strong>
- premenopausal women aged 18 to 23 and 29 to 40 years. We found that increased age during reproductive
- life is accompanied by a significant rise in both basal and stimulated serum follicle-stimulating
- hormone levels. This was accompanied by an increase in the serum level of estradiol-17 beta and the
- urine
- </strong>
- levels of estradiol-17 beta and 17 beta-estradiol-17-glucosiduronate. The serum level of estrone sulfate
- decreased with age. Serum and urine levels of other estrogens were unchanged. The basal and stimulated
- levels of luteinizing hormone were also unchanged. There was a significant decrease in basal and stimulated
- serum prolactin levels. Serum levels of dehydroepiandrosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate decreased
- with age, but serum testosterone was unchanged. It is concluded that significant age-related changes in the
- female hormonal environment occur during the reproductive years.
- </p>
- <p>
- Endocrinology 1981 Dec;109(6):2273-5. <strong>Progesterone-induced estrogen receptor-regulatory factor in
- hamster uterine nuclei: preliminary characterization in a cell-free system.</strong> Okulicz WC,
- MacDonald RG, Leavitt WW.<strong>
- "In vitro studies have demonstrated a progesterone-induced activity associated with the uterine nuclear
- fraction which resulted in the loss of nuclear estrogen receptor."</strong> "This progesterone-dependent
- stimulation of estrogen receptor loss was absent when nuclear extract was prepared in phosphate buffer
- rather than Tris buffer. In addition, sodium molybdate and sodium metavanadate (both at 10 mM) inhibited
- this activity in nuclear extract. These observations support the hypothesis that progesterone modulation of
- estrogen action may be accomplished by induction (or activation) of an estrogen receptor-regulatory factor
- (Re-RF), and this factor may in turn <strong>act to eliminate the occupied form of estrogen receptor from
- the nucleus,</strong> perhaps through a hypothetical dephosphorylation-inactivation mechanism."
- </p>
-
- <p>
- American Journal of Human Biology, v.8, n.6, (1996): 751-759. <strong>Ovarian function in the latter half of
- the reproductive lifespan.
- </strong>O'Rourke, M T; Lipson, S F; Ellison, P T. "Thus, ovarian endocrine function over the course of
- reproductive life represents a process of change, but not one of generalized functional decline."
- </p>
- <p>
- J Gerontol, 1978 Mar, 33:2, 191-6.<strong>
- Circulating plasma levels of pregnenolone, progesterone, estrogen, luteinizing hormone, and follicle
- stimulating hormone in young and aged C57BL/6 mice during various stages of pregnancy.</strong>
- Parkening TA; Lau IF; Saksena SK; Chang MC Young (3-5 mo of age) and senescent (12-15 mo of age) multiparous
- C57BL/6 mice were mated with young males (3-6 mo of age) and the numbers of preimplantation embryos and
- implantation sites determined on days 1 (day of plug), 4, 9, and 16 of pregnancy. The numbers of viable
- embryos were significantly lower (p less than 0.02 to p less than 0.001) in senescent females compared with
- young females on all days except day 1 of pregnancy. Plasma samples tested by radioimmunoassay indicated
- circulating estradiol-17B was significantly lower (P less than 0.05) on day 1 and <strong>higher (p less
- than 0.05) on day 4
- </strong>in older females, whereas FSH was higher on days 4, 9, and 16 (p less than 0.02 to p less than
- 0.001) in senescent females when compared with samples from young females. Levels of pregnenolone,
- progesterone, estrone, and LH were not significantly different at any stage of pregnancy in the two age
- groups. From the hormonal data it did not appear that degenerating corpora lutea were responsible for the
- declining litter size in this strain of aged mouse.
- </p>
- <p>
- Biol Reprod, 1985 Jun, 32:5, 989-97. <strong>Orthotopic ovarian transplantations in young and aged C57BL/6J
- mice.</strong> Parkening TA; Collins TJ; Elder FF. "Orthotopic ovarian transplantations were done
- between young (6-wk-old) and aged (17-mo-old) C57BL/6J mice. The percentages of mice mating following
- surgery from the four possible ovarian transfer combinations were as follows: young into young, 83%; <strong
- >young into aged, 46%;</strong> aged into young, 83%; and aged into aged, 36%." <strong>"The only
- statistical differences found between the transfer groups occurred in FSH concentrations. Plasma FSH was
- markedly elevated (P less than 0.005) in young recipients with ovaries transplanted from aged donors, in
- comparison to young recipients with ovaries from young donors.
- </strong>
-
- These data indicate that the aging ovary and uterus play a secondary role in <strong>reproductive failure
- and that the aging hypothalamic-hypophyseal complex is primarily responsible for the loss of fecundity
- in older female C57BL/6J mice."
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- J Endocrinol, 1978 Jul, 78:1, 147-8. <strong>Postovulatory levels of progestogens, oestrogens, luteinizing
- hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone in the plasma of aged golden hamsters exhibiting a delay in
- fertilization.</strong> Parkening TA; Saksena SK; Lau IF.
- </p>
- <p>
- Biology of Reproduction, v.49, n.2, (1993): 387-392. <strong>Controlled neonatal exposure to estrogens: A
- suitable tool for reproductive aging studies in the female rat.</strong> Rodriguez, P; Fernandez-Galaz,
- C; Tejero, A. "The present study was designed to determine whether the modification of exposure time to
- large doses of estrogens provided a reliable model for early changes in reproductive aging." "Premature
- occurrence of vaginal opening was observed in all three estrogenized groups independently of EB exposure.
- However, females bearing implants for 24 h had first estrus at the same age as their controls and cycled
- regularly, and neither histological nor gonadal alterations could be observed at 75 days. Interestingly,
- they failed to cycle regularly at 5 mo whereas controls continued to cycle." "On the other hand, the
- increase of EB exposure (Ei5, EI) resulted in a gradual and significant delay in the onset of first estrus
- and in a high number of estrous phases, as frequently observed during reproductive decline. At 75 days, the
- ovaries of these last two groups showed a reduced number of corpora lutea and <strong>an increased number of
- large follicles</strong>. According to this histological pattern, ovarian weight and progesterone (P)
- content gradually decreased whereas both groups showed higher estradiol (E-2) content than controls. This
- resulted in <strong>a higher E-2:P ratio, comparable to that observed in normal aging rats.</strong>
- <strong>The results allow us to conclude that the exposure time to large doses of estrogens is critical to
- the gradual enhancement of reproductive decline. Furthermore, exposures as brief as 24 h led to a
- potential early model for aging studies that will be useful to verify whether neuroendocrine changes
- precede gonadal impairment."</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1996 Apr;81(4):1495-501. <strong>Characterization of reproductive hormonal dynamics
- in the perimenopause.</strong> Santoro N, Brown JR, Adel T, Skurnick JH. "<strong>Overall mean estrone
- conjugate excretion was</strong>
- <strong><hr /></strong>
- <strong>and was similarly elevated in both follicular and luteal phases.</strong>
- <strong>Luteal phase pregnanediol excretion was diminished in the perimenopausal women</strong> compared to
- that in younger normal subjects (range for integrated pregnanediol,<strong> 1.0-8.4 vs. 1.6-12.7 </strong>
- <hr />
- <strong>
- conclude that altered ovarian function in the perimenopause can be observed as early as age 43 yr and
- include hyperestrogenism, hypergonadotropism, and decreased luteal phase progesterone excretion. These
- hormonal alterations may well be responsible for the increased gynecological morbidity that
- characterizes this period of life."
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Brain Res, 1994 Jul 25, 652:1, 161-3.<strong>
- The 21-aminosteroid antioxidant, U74389F, prevents estradiol-induced depletion of hypothalamic
- beta-endorphin in adult female rats.</strong> Schipper HM; Desjardins GC; Beaudet A; Brawer JR.<strong>
- "A single intramuscular injection of 2 mg estradiol valerate (EV) results in neuronal degeneration and
- beta-endorphin depletion in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus of adult female rats." "The present
- findings support the hypothesis that the toxic effect of estradiol on hypothalamic beta-endorphin
- neurons is mediated by free radicals."
- </strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Clin Exp Obstet Gynecol 2000;27(1):54-6. <strong>Hormonal reproductive status of women at menopausal
- transition compared to that observed in a group of midreproductive-aged women.</strong> Sengos C,
- Iatrakis G, Andreakos C, Xygakis A, Papapetrou P. <strong>CONCLUSION: The reproductive hormonal patterns
- in</strong>
- <strong>perimenopausal women favor a relatively hypergonadotropic hyper-estrogenic milieu.</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Endocr Relat Cancer 1999 Jun;6(2):307-14.<strong>
- Aromatase overexpression and breast hyperplasia, an in vivo model--continued overexpression of aromatase
- is sufficient to maintain hyperplasia without circulating estrogens, and aromatase inhibitors abrogate
- these preneoplastic changes in mammary glands.</strong> Tekmal RR, Kirma N, Gill K, Fowler K "To test
- directly the role of breast-tissue estrogen in initiation of breast cancer, we have developed the
- aromatase-transgenic mouse model and demonstrated for the first time that increased mammary estrogens
- resulting from the overexpression of aromatase in mammary glands lead to the induction of various
- preneoplastic and neoplastic changes that are similar to early breast cancer." "Our current studies show
- aromatase overexpression is sufficient to induce and maintain early preneoplastic and neoplastic changes in
- female mice without circulating ovarian estrogen. Preneoplastic and neoplastic changes induced in mammary
- glands as a result of aromatase overexpression can be completely abrogated with the administration of the
- aromatase inhibitor, letrozole. Consistent with complete reduction in hyperplasia,<strong>
- we have also seen downregulation of estrogen receptor and a decrease in cell proliferation</strong>
- markers, suggesting aromatase-induced hyperplasia can be treated with aromatase inhibitors. Our studies
- demonstrate that <strong>aromatase overexpression alone, without circulating estrogen, is responsible for
- the induction of breast hyperplasia and these changes can be abrogated using aromatase
- inhibitors."</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 2000 Jun;73(3-4):141-5. <strong>Elevated steroid sulfatase expression in breast
- cancers.</strong> Utsumi T, Yoshimura N, Takeuchi S, Maruta M, Maeda K, Harada N. In situ estrogen
- synthesis makes an important contribution to the high estrogen concentration found in breast cancer tissues.
- Steroid sulfatase which hydrolyzes several sulfated steroids such as estrone sulfate, dehydroepiandrosterone
- sulfate, and cholesterol sulfate may be involved. In the present study, we therefore, assessed steroid
- sulfatase mRNA levels in breast malignancies and background tissues from 38 patients by reverse
- transcription and polymerase chain reaction. The levels in breast cancer tissues were significantly
- increased at 1458.4+/-2119.7 attomoles/mg RNA (mean +/- SD) as compared with 535.6+/-663.4 attomoles/mg RNA
- for non-malignant tissues (P<0.001). Thus, increased steroid sulfatase expression may be partly
- responsible for local overproduction of estrogen and provide a growth advantage for tumor cells.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ann N Y Acad Sci 1986;464:106-16. <strong>Uptake and concentration of steroid hormones in mammary
- tissues.</strong> Thijssen JH, van Landeghem AA, Poortman J In order to exert their biological effects,
- steroid hormones must enter the cells of target tissues and after binding to specific receptor molecules
- must remain for a prolonged period of time in the nucleus. Therefore the endogenous levels and the
- subcellular distribution of estradiol, estrone, DHEAS, DHEA ad 5-Adiol were measured in normal breast
- tissues and in malignant and nonmalignant breast tumors from pre- and postmenopausal women. For estradiol
- the highest tissue levels were found in the malignant samples<strong>. No differences were seen in these
- levels between pre- and postmenopausal women despite the largely different peripheral blood
- levels.</strong> For estrone no differences were found between the tissues studied. Although the
- estradiol concentration was higher in the estradiol-receptor-positive than in the receptor-negative tumors,
- no correlation was calculated between the estradiol and the receptor consent. Striking differences were seen
- between the breast and uterine tissues for the total tissue concentration of estradiol, the ratio between
- estradiol and estrone, and the subcellular distribution of both estrogens. <strong>At similar receptor
- concentrations in the tissues these differences cannot easily be explained.</strong> Regarding the
- androgens, the tissue/plasma gradient was higher for DHEA than for 5-Adiol, and for DHEAS there was very
- probably a much lower tissue gradient. The highly significant correlation between the androgens suggests an
- intracellular metabolism of DHEAS to DHEA and 5-Adiol. <strong>Lower concentrations of DHEAS and DHEA were
- observed in the malignant tissues compared with the normal ones and the benign lesions.</strong> For
- 5-Adiol no differences were found and therefore these data do not support our original hypothesis on the
- role of this androgen in the etiology of breast abnormalities. Hence the way in which adrenal androgens
- express their influence on the breast cells remains unclear.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 1978 Jul;9(1):59-66. <strong>Sex hormone concentrations in post-menopausal
- women.</strong> Vermeulen A, Verdonck L. "Plasma sex hormone concentrations (testosterone, (T),
- androstenedione (A), oestrone (E1) and oestradiol (E2) were measured in forty post-menopausal women more
- than 4 years post-normal menopause." <strong>"Sex hormone concentrations in this group of postmenopausal
- women (greater than 4YPM) did not show any variation as a function of age,</strong> with the possible
- exception of E2 which showed a tendency to decrease in the late post-menopause. E1 and to a lesser extent E2
- as well as the E1/A ratio were significantly corelated with degree of obesity or fat mass, suggesting a
- possible role of fat tissue in the aromatization of androgens. Neither the T/A nor the E2/E1 ratios were
- correlated with fat mass, suggesting that the reduction of 17 oxo-group does not occur in fat tissue. The
- E1/A ratio was significantly higher than the reported conversion rate of A in E1."
- </p>
- <p>
- J Steroid Biochem 1984 Nov;21(5):607-12. <strong>The endogenous concentration of estradiol and estrone in
- normal human postmenopausal endometrium.</strong> Vermeulen-Meiners C, Jaszmann LJ, Haspels AA, Poortman
- J, Thijssen JH The endogenous estrone (E1) and estradiol (E2) levels (pg/g tissue) were measured in 54
- postmenopausal, atrophic endometria and compared with the E1 and E2 levels in plasma (pg/ml). The results
- from the tissue levels of both steroids<strong>
- showed large variations and there was no significant correlation with their plasma levels. The mean E2
- concentration in tissue was 420 pg/g, 50 times higher than in plasma and the E1 concentration of 270
- pg/g was 9 times higher.
- </strong>The E2/E1 ratio in tissue of 1.6, was higher than the corresponding E2/E1 ratio in plasma, being
- 0.3. <strong>We conclude that normal postmenopausal atrophic endometria contain relatively high
- concentrations of estradiol and somewhat lower estrone levels.</strong> These tissue levels do not lead
- to histological effects.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1998 Dec; 83(12):4474-80. <strong>Deficient 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type
- 2 expression in endometriosis: failure to metabolize 17beta-estradiol.</strong> Zeitoun K, Takayama K,
- Sasano H, Suzuki T, Moghrabi N, Andersson S, Johns A, Meng L, Putman M, Carr B, Bulun SE.<strong> </strong>
- "Aberrant aromatase expression in stromal cells of endometriosis gives rise to conversion of circulating
- androstenedione to estrone in this tissue, whereas aromatase expression is absent in the eutopic
- endometrium. In this study, we initially demonstrated by Northern blotting transcripts of the reductive
- 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17betaHSD) type 1, which catalyzes the conversion of estrone to
- 17beta-estradiol, in both eutopic endometrium and endometriosis. <strong>Thus, it follows that the product
- of the aromatase reaction, namely estrone, that is weakly estrogenic can be converted to the potent
- estrogen, 17beta-estradiol, in endometriotic tissues. It was previously</strong>
- <strong>
- demonstrated that progesterone stimulates the inactivation of 17beta-estradiol</strong> through
- conversion to estrone in eutopic endometrial epithelial cells." <strong>"In conclusion, inactivation of
- 17beta-estradiol is impaired in endometriotic tissues due to deficient expression of 17betaHSD-2, which
- is normally expressed in eutopic endometrium in response to progesterone."</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Biochem Biophys Res Commun 1999 Aug 2;261(2):499-503. <strong>Piceatannol, a stilbene phytochemical,
- inhibits mitochondrial F0F1-ATPase activity by targeting the F1 complex.</strong> Zheng J, Ramirez VD.
- </p>
- <p>
- Eur J Pharmacol 1999 Feb 26;368(1):95-102.<strong>
- Rapid inhibition of rat brain mitochondrial proton F0F1-ATPase activity by estrogens: comparison with
- Na+, K+ -ATPase of porcine cortex. Zheng J, Ramirez VD</strong>. "The data indicate that the ubiquitous
- mitochondrial F0F1-ATPase is a specific target site for estradiol and related estrogenic compounds; however,
- under this in vitro condition, the effect seems to require pharmacological concentrations."
- </p>
- <p>
- J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol 1999 Jan;68(1-2):65-75. <strong>Purification and identification of an estrogen
- binding protein from rat brain: oligomycin sensitivity-conferring protein (OSCP), a subunit of
- mitochondrial F0F1-ATP synthase/ATPase.</strong> Zheng J, Ramirez VD. "This finding opens up the
- possibility that estradiol, and probably other compounds with<strong>
- similar structures, in addition to their classical genomic mechanism, may interact with ATP
- synthase/ATPase by binding to OSCP, and thereby modulating cellular energy metabolism."</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>© Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com</p>
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