Literature DB >> 14556282

Dehydroepiandrosterone upregulates neural androgen receptor level and transcriptional activity.

Shi-Fang Lu1, Qianxing Mo, Shan Hu, Carrie Garippa, Neal G Simon.   

Abstract

The mechanism of action of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), a neuroactive neurosteroid synthesized in the brains of humans and other mammals, has not been fully characterized in the adult brain. Although well known for modulatory effects on GABA(A), NMDA, and sigma(1) receptors, studies in both CNS and peripheral target cells suggest that DHEA also may exert genomic effects via the androgen receptor (AR). The current study tested the hypothesis that DHEA was capable of producing androgenic effects in the CNS by assaying its ability to induce three characteristic effects of an androgenic compound. These included the ability to upregulate neural AR protein level in mouse brain and immortalized GT1-7 hypothalamic cells, the capacity to induce transcriptional activity through AR in CV-1 cells transfected with an MMTV-ARE-CAT reporter, and competition for recombinant AR binding in a radioligand binding assay. The results showed that DHEA treatment significantly augmented AR both in vivo and in vitro, and that this effect was not blocked by trilostane (TRIL), a known 3beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (3beta-HSD) inhibitor. DHEA also promoted AR-mediated CAT reporter expression and competed with dihydrotestosterone (DHT) for binding to recombinant AR in a cell-free system. These data indicate that DHEA possesses intrinsic androgenic activity that is potentially independent of metabolic conversion to other androgens, and that it can affect gene function through the AR. In combination with its modulation of neurotransmitter receptors at the cell membrane level, the findings suggest that the mechanism of action of DHEA in the brain can involve a "crosstalk" cellular signaling system that involves both nongenomic and genomic components. Copyright 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14556282     DOI: 10.1002/neu.10260

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurobiol        ISSN: 0022-3034


  17 in total

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4.  DHEA metabolism to the neurosteroid androsterone: a possible mechanism of DHEA's antidepressant action.

Authors:  Rivka Ben Dor; Christine E Marx; Lawrence J Shampine; David R Rubinow; Peter J Schmidt
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2015-06-25       Impact factor: 4.530

Review 5.  Genetics of androgen metabolism in women with infertility and hypoandrogenism.

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9.  Androgens induce dopaminergic neurotoxicity via caspase-3-dependent activation of protein kinase Cdelta.

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Review 10.  A review of age-related dehydroepiandrosterone decline and its association with well-known geriatric syndromes: is treatment beneficial?

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