| Literature DB >> 21941679 |
Mieke Sinnesael1, Steven Boonen, Frank Claessens, Evelien Gielen, Dirk Vanderschueren.
Abstract
Testosterone is an important hormone for both bone gain and maintenance in men. Hypogonadal men have accelerated bone turnover and increased fracture risk. In these men, administration of testosterone inhibits bone resorption and maintains bone mass. Testosterone, however, is converted into estradiol via aromatization in many tissues including male bone. The importance of estrogen receptor alpha activation as well of aromatization of androgens into estrogens was highlighted by a number of cases of men suffering from an inactivating mutation in the estrogen receptor alpha or in the aromatase enzyme. All these men typically had low bone mass, high bone turnover and open epiphyses. In line with these findings, cohort studies have confirmed that estradiol contributes to the maintenance of bone mass after reaching peak bone mass, with an association between estradiol and fractures in elderly men. Recent studies in knock-out mice have increased our understanding of the role of androgens and estrogens in different bone compartments. Estrogen receptor activation, but not androgen receptor activation, is involved in the regulation of male longitudinal appendicular skeletal growth in mice. Both the androgen and the estrogen receptor can independently mediate the cancellous bone-sparing effects of sex steroids in male mice. Selective KO studies of the androgen receptor in osteoblasts in male mice suggest that the osteoblast in the target cell for androgen receptor mediated maintenance of trabecular bone volume and coordination of bone matrix synthesis and mineralization. Taken together, both human and animal studies suggest that testosterone has a dual mode of action on different bone surfaces with involvement of both the androgen and estrogen receptor.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21941679 PMCID: PMC3173882 DOI: 10.4061/2011/240328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Osteoporos ISSN: 2042-0064
Figure 1Metabolism of sex steroids. (i) Testosterone (T), that is secreted by the testes, can directly act on its receptor, the androgen receptor (AR), present in bone cells. (ii) T can also be converted locally to dihydrotestosterone (DHT) by 5α-reductase. (iii) In addition, T can undergo aromatization to 17β-estradiol (E2) by aromatase. E2acts on one or both estrogen receptors (ERα or ERβ). (iv) The adrenals secrete C19 androgens including dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) that can also be converted to (v) estrone (E1) and E2by aromatase, 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17β-HSD), and 3β-HSD or to T by 17β-HSD and/or 3β-HSD. (vi) In men and women, T and E2are predominantly bound to sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG), synthesized by the liver.
Clinical parameters of men with aromatase deficiency or estrogen resistance.
| Aromatase deficiency | Estrogen resistance | |
|---|---|---|
| Age of diagnosis | Newborn, 24–38 yrs | 28.5 yrs |
| Bone phenotype | (i) Persistent linear growth | (i) Continuing linear growth into adulthood |
| (ii) Unfused epiphyseal cartilages | (ii) Unfused epiphyses | |
| (iii) Delayed bone age | (iii) Delayed bone age | |
| (iv) Osteopenia/osteoporosis | (iv) Osteoporosis | |
| (v) Eunuchoid proportion of the skeleton | (v) Progressive | |
| (vi) Progressively worsening of bilateral | (vi) Eunuchoid proportions of the skeleton | |
| Hormonal analysis | (i) Serum estradiol below the range of detection | (i) High concentration of serum estradiol, estrone, FSH, LH |
| (ii) Gonadotropins and circulating testosterone ranging from normal to elevated | (ii) Normal serum testosterone | |
| (iii) Impaired glucose metabolism | ||
| (iv) Insulin resistance | ||
| Effect of estrogen treatment | (i) Complete epiphyseal closure | No changes |
| (ii) Spinal BMD increase | ||
| (iii) Skeletal maturation |
Overview of cohort studies in men.
| Average age of men | Number of men | Study duration | LC-MS-MS | Immunoassay | Main result | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rancho Bernardo study [ | 66 | 352 | 12 yr | x | (i) E: strong correlation with fractures (ii) T: no correlation with fractures | |
| Dubbo study [ | >60 | 609 | 16 yr | x | (i) T: no correlation with fractures | |
|
Tromso [ | 50–84 | 1364 | 8.4 yr | x | T, E, SHBG: no correlation with fractures | |
| Rotterdam study [ | 67.7 ± 6.8 | 178 | 6.5 yr | x | T, E, SHBG: no correlation with fractures | |
| Framingham study [ | 71 | 793 | 18 yr | x | (i) E: strong correlation with fractures (ii) T + E: strong correlation with fractures | |
| MrOS study [ | 75 | 2639 | 3.3 yr | x | E, SHBG: strong correlation with fractures |
E: estrogen; T: testosterone; SHBG: sex hormone binding globulin.
Relative effects of testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, estradiol, and selective estrogen receptor modulator on body weight, appendicular skeletal growth, cancellous bone mass, and on cortical bone area.
| Body weight gain | Appendicular skeletal growth | Cancellous bone mass | Cortical bone area | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Orch + T | =,↑ | =, ↑ | ↑ | ↑ |
| Orch + DHT | =,↓ | =,↑ | ↑ | =, ↑ |
| Orch + E2 | =, ↓ | = | ↑ | =, ↑ |
| Orch + SERM | ↓ | NA | ↑ | ↑ |
Orch: orchidectomy; T: testosterone; DHT: dihydrotestosterone; E2: estradiol; SERM: selective estrogen receptor modulator.
Summary of the skeletal phenotypes in mice with different sex steroid-related gene inactivations.
| Cancellous bone | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Longitudinal skeletal growth | Cortical bone area | Intact mice | Effect of E in Orch | Effect of T in Orch | Effect of DHT in Orch | |
| BERKO | 0 | 0 | 0 | Yes | ND | Yes |
| ERKO | − | − | + | No | Yes | Yes |
| DERKO | − | − | + | No | ND | Yes |
| ArKO | − | − | − | Yes | ND | ND |
| Tfm | ? | ? | − | Yes | Partial | ND |
+: Increased; −: decreased; 0: no effect; conflicting results; ND: not determined; Orch: orchidectomy; E: treatment with physiological levels of estrogen; T: treatment with physiological of testosterone; DHT: treatment with physiological levels of 5α-dihydrotestosterone.
Overview bone parameters in osteoblast-specific AR knockout mice.
| Tb. N (/mm) | Tb. Th ( | BV/TV (%) | Osteoid surface (%BS) | OCL surface (%BS) | MAR ( | BFR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Col 2.3-cre AR KO | ↓ | ↑ | ↓ | = | = | = | = |
| Osteocalcin-cre KO | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | ↑ | = | = | = |
Tb. N: trabecular number; Tb. Th: trabecular thickness; BV/TV: trabecular bone volume; OCL: osteoclast; MAR: mineral apposition rate; BFR: bone formation rate.