Literature DB >> 15068814

Suppression of steroidogenesis and activator protein-1 transcription factor activity in rat adrenals by vitamin E deficiency-induced chronic oxidative stress.

Parveen Abidi1, Susan Leers-Sucheta, Salman Azhar.   

Abstract

Excessive oxidative stress and associated macromolecular damage are considered to be key features of aging, and appear to contribute to the age-related decline in steroid hormone production in adrenal and testicular Leydig cells. The current studies were initiated to examine the potential mechanism by which excessive oxidative stress during aging attenuates the functional expression of the oxidant-responsive transcription factor Activator protein-1. Chronic oxidative stress was induced in vivo by maintaining groups of rats on a diet deficient in vitamin E for 6 months. Plasma, liver, and adrenal tissues from vitamin E-deficient animals had negligible levels of this vitamin and showed high susceptibility to in vitro lipid peroxidation. Synthesis and secretion of corticosterone in response to corticotropin (ACTH), dibutyryl-cAMP, or 20alpha-hydroxycholesterol in vitro was significantly reduced in adrenocortical cells prepared cells from rats deficient in vitamin E. AP-1 DNA-binding activity was diminished approximately 55 % in adrenal extracts from vitamin E-deficient rats with no corresponding change in the binding activity of SP-1. The vitamin E deficiency-mediated loss of AP-1 activity was not due to an alteration in the dimeric composition of constituent proteins, but rather to a general down-regulation of steady-state levels of members of the Fos and Jun families of proteins. Interestingly, vitamin E deficiency also reduced the expression of the redox-regulated Ref-1 protein. Collectively these data demonstrate that chronic oxidative stress specifically down-regulates essential components of the AP-1 transcription factor complex, and suggest that aberrancies in AP-1 expression may adversely affect processes crucial for intracellular cholesterol transport and steroid hormone production.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15068814     DOI: 10.1016/j.jnutbio.2003.11.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nutr Biochem        ISSN: 0955-2863            Impact factor:   6.048


  7 in total

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Authors:  Sang-Kyu Park; Grier P Page; Kyoungmi Kim; David B Allison; Mohsen Meydani; Richard Weindruch; Tomas A Prolla
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Review 5.  Leydig cells: From stem cells to aging.

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Authors:  Tingting Gao; Meng Lin; Binbin Shao; Qiao Zhou; Yufeng Wang; Xia Chen; Dan Zhao; Xiuliang Dai; Cong Shen; Hongbo Cheng; Shenmin Yang; Hong Li; Bo Zheng; Xingming Zhong; Jun Yu; Li Chen; Xiaoyan Huang
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2020-06-28       Impact factor: 4.534

7.  SOD2 deficiency-induced oxidative stress attenuates steroidogenesis in mouse ovarian granulosa cells.

Authors:  Syed Kashif Zaidi; Wen-Jun Shen; Yuan Cortez; Stefanie Bittner; Alex Bittner; Sara Arshad; Ting-Ting Huang; Fredric B Kraemer; Salman Azhar
Journal:  Mol Cell Endocrinol       Date:  2020-07-25       Impact factor: 4.102

  7 in total

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