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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Synthetic 19-nortestosterone derivatives as estrogen receptor alpha subtype-selective ligands induce similar receptor conformational changes and steroid receptor coactivator recruitment than natural estrogens.

The binding of estradiol (E(2)) to estrogen receptors (ER) is followed by conformational changes resulting in coactivator or corepressor recruitment that influences gene transcription. A series of synthetic A-ring reduced 19-nortestosterone-derived progestins has the capacity to selectively bind and activate transcription through the ERalpha. Herein, the molecular mechanisms involved in ER subtype-selective interactions of these compounds as assessed by their effects upon both ERalpha and ERbeta structural conformation and their ability to induce recruitment of steroid receptor coactivator-1 ( SRC-1) to ERalpha were investigated. The results demonstrated that all synthetic A-ring 3beta,5alpha-tetrahydro-reduced derivatives of 19-nortestosterone induced an ERalpha trypsin digestion pattern similar to that seen with E(2), without effects upon ERbeta. In addition, these compounds had the ability to recruit SRC-1 to the ligand-binding domain of ERalpha similar to E(2). Our data indicate that A-ring 3beta,5alpha-tetrahydro-reduced 19-nortestosterone-derived progestins behave as selective ERalpha agonists with ligand-receptor structural and functional responses similar to those induced with natural E(2).[1]

References

  1. Synthetic 19-nortestosterone derivatives as estrogen receptor alpha subtype-selective ligands induce similar receptor conformational changes and steroid receptor coactivator recruitment than natural estrogens. García-Becerra, R., Borja-Cacho, E., Cooney, A.J., Smith, C.L., Lemus, A.E., Pérez-Palacios, G., Larrea, F. J. Steroid Biochem. Mol. Biol. (2006) [Pubmed]
 
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