Literature DB >> 22549398

Steroid hormone receptors: long- and short-term integrators of the internal milieu and the external environment.

J D Blaustein1.   

Abstract

Many of the influences of estrogens and progestins on the brain and behavior are mediated by estrogen receptors and progestin receptors, acting as transcriptional regulators. The homologous and heterologous regulation of the concentrations of these receptors by cognate hormones is well established. However, although they were discovered and characterized based on their binding to cognate hormone and their role in transcriptional regulation, steroid hormone receptors have a more complex role and serve many more functions than originally suspected. First, besides being regulated by steroid hormones, the intracellular concentrations of brain steroid hormone receptors are regulated by neurotransmitters, a pathway by which stimuli from the environment, including from conspecific animals, can modulate the concentration of particular steroid hormone receptors in subsets of cells. Further, besides being activated by cognate steroid hormones, the receptors can be activated by a variety of neurotransmitters and phosphorylation pathways, providing a route through which environmental stimulation can activate steroid-receptor-dependent functions in specific cells. In addition, the transcription factor, estrogen receptor-α, produced from the estrogen receptor-α gene, can be modified to be targeted to membranes, where it can signal via kinase pathways. Finally, developmental experiences, such as particular stressors during the pubertal period, can permanently remodel the brain's response to ovarian hormones, most likely by long-term changes in regulation of the receptors mediating those responses. In addition to their function in responding to cognate ligand, it is now more appropriate to think of steroid hormone receptors as integrators of a wide variety of signaling pathways. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22549398     DOI: 10.1055/s-0032-1311605

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Horm Metab Res        ISSN: 0018-5043            Impact factor:   2.936


  7 in total

1.  Advances in neuroendocrine mechanisms.

Authors:  S K Mani; H Lara; C Romero; R J Handa; T J Wu
Journal:  Horm Metab Res       Date:  2012-07-06       Impact factor: 2.936

2.  Female mice with deletion of Type One 5α-reductase have reduced reproductive responding during proestrus and after hormone-priming.

Authors:  Carolyn J Koonce; Cheryl A Frye
Journal:  Pharmacol Biochem Behav       Date:  2014-03-18       Impact factor: 3.533

Review 3.  Estrongenic steroid hormones in lung cancer.

Authors:  Jill M Siegfried; Laura P Stabile
Journal:  Semin Oncol       Date:  2013-12-12       Impact factor: 4.929

4.  Distal substitutions drive divergent DNA specificity among paralogous transcription factors through subdivision of conformational space.

Authors:  William H Hudson; Bradley R Kossmann; Ian Mitchelle S de Vera; Shih-Wei Chuo; Emily R Weikum; Geeta N Eick; Joseph W Thornton; Ivaylo N Ivanov; Douglas J Kojetin; Eric A Ortlund
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-12-29       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 5.  Smoking out reproductive hormone actions in lung cancer.

Authors:  Jill M Siegfried
Journal:  Mol Cancer Res       Date:  2014-01-07       Impact factor: 5.852

6.  Survivin Is a transcriptional target of STAT3 critical to estradiol neuroprotection in global ischemia.

Authors:  Yoshihide Sehara; Kirsty Sawicka; Jee-Yeon Hwang; Adrianna Latuszek-Barrantes; Anne M Etgen; R Suzanne Zukin
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2013-07-24       Impact factor: 6.167

7.  C/EBPβ Isoforms Expression in the Rat Brain during the Estrous Cycle.

Authors:  Valeria Hansberg-Pastor; Ana Gabriela Piña-Medina; Aliesha González-Arenas; Ignacio Camacho-Arroyo
Journal:  Int J Endocrinol       Date:  2015-04-29       Impact factor: 3.257

  7 in total

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