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2-(Hydroxyalkyl)estradiols: synthesis and biological evaluation.

Synthetic estrogens possessing hydroxyalkyl side chains at the C-2 position of the A-ring were designed in order to further elucidate the structural and electronic requirements of the estrogen receptor to A-ring modifications. Furthermore, these compounds were envisaged as being stable analogs of the estradiol metabolite 2-hydroxyestradiol. The homologous series of 2-(hydroxyalkyl)estradiols 1-3 has been prepared by chain extension of 2-formylestradiol 6, which, in turn, was prepared via ortholithiation of estradiol. The substituted estradiols 1-3 were assayed for their abilities to bind to the estrogen receptor in MCF-7 cells and induce estrogen-responsive gene expression. The estradiol homologs exhibited significantly weaker affinity than estradiol for the MCF-7 cell estrogen receptor, with relative binding affinities (estradiol = 100) ranging from 1.11 for 2-(hydroxymethyl)estradiol (1) to 0.073 for 2-(hydroxypropyl)estradiol (3). The relative activities for mRNA induction of the pS2 gene by the estradiol homologs closely parallel the relative binding affinities for the estrogen receptor in MCF-7 cells. 2-(Hydroxymethyl)-estradiol exhibited similar estrogen receptor affinity and pS2 gene induction to the catechol estrogen 2-hydroxyestradiol and may prove useful in examination of the further biological effects of 2-hydroxyestrogen homologs.[1]

References

  1. 2-(Hydroxyalkyl)estradiols: synthesis and biological evaluation. Lovely, C.J., Gilbert, N.E., Liberto, M.M., Sharp, D.W., Lin, Y.C., Brueggemeier, R.W. J. Med. Chem. (1996) [Pubmed]
 
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