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Nathan Goodyear

Estrogen receptors alpha and beta in the normal, hyperplastic and carcinomatous human p... - 0 views

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    ER alpha and ER beta receptors play role in BPH and prostate cancers.  ER alpha is proliferative and inflammatory: ER beta is inhibitory.
Nathan Goodyear

Essential Role for Estrogen Receptor β in Stromal-Epithelial Regulation of Pr... - 0 views

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    ER beta agonists shown to be anti-proliferative in the prostate and "ablated preexisting prostatic epithelial hyperplasia".  This has important implications: low T conditions increase ER alpha expression, which increases ER alpha production.  Low T is a pro inflammatory state in men, which increases aromatase activity.  Thus increase conversion of T to E2 in the stroma of the prostate results in growth.  ER beta is not activated.
Nathan Goodyear

Subtype-specific activation of estrogen recept... [Phytomedicine. 2007] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Study finds that Err 731, extract of Siberian Rhubarb, strong affinity for ER-beta and weak activity for ER-alpha in bone, though none found present in endometrial cells.  This is the second study to provide evidence of molecular mechanism of action through ER-beta receptors.
Nathan Goodyear

Indole-3-carbinol disrupts estrogen rece... [Mol Cell Endocrinol. 2012] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    Indole-3-carbinol degrades ER alpha expression on breast cancer cells lines and down regulates ER alpha expression.  Not only does I3C degrade ER alpha expression it inhibits its expression as well.    Additionally, I3C interferes with signaling associated with ER alpha through IGF-1.
Nathan Goodyear

Estrogen receptor (ER) β, a modulator of ERα in the uterus - 0 views

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    ER-beta shown to have an anti-proliferative effect through it's counter regulatory action on ER-alpha.  This study looked at estradiol interaction between ER-alpha/beta in the uterus.
Nathan Goodyear

RB&E | Full text | Estrogen and inflammation modulate estrogen receptor alpha expressio... - 0 views

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    ER-alpha plays role in TMJ.  This study looked to see if inflammation and E2 would modulate ER-alpha expression.  They found this to be tissue dependent and whether inflammation was present or not.  In the presence of inflammation, ER-alpa expression was reduced, but in inflamed joint, ER-alph expression stayed unchanged.
Nathan Goodyear

Age Increase of Estrogen Receptor-α (ERα) in Cortical Astrocytes Impairs Neur... - 0 views

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    increased ER-alpha expression associated with decreased neurotrophic activity.  A decrease in the neurotrophic activity of the aging brain is associated with many of the diseases of the aging brain. The major point here is that ER-alph is known to increase inflammatory signaling.  So increased inflammation, just via the ER receptors, plays a role in the aging brain.
Nathan Goodyear

Biological functions and clinical implications of oestrogen receptors alfa and beta in ... - 0 views

  • ERα-positive cells respond to E2 with increased proliferation
  • ERβ was artificially introduced into these cells, E2-induced proliferation was inhibited
  • The proliferative response to E2 seems to be determined by the ratio of ERα/ERβ. The functions of ERβ in the breast are probably related to its antiproliferative as well as its prodifferentiative functions
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  • The risk of developing PC seems to be related to the diet
  • In the human prostate, ERβ is expressed in the basal epithelial cells and AR in the luminal epithelium.
  • For many years, DHT was considered to be the main hormone guiding prostate development and function. However, the idea was challenged when in 2001 Mahendroo et al. showed that mice in which both forms of 5α-reductase had been inactivated, have a normal functional prostate [50]. The question was then raised as to what is the real function of DHT in the prostate. In 1989 we hypothesized that DHT is a precursor of an oestrogen, 5α-androstane-3β,17β-diol (3β-Adiol) and that physiological levels of an oestrogen could be produced in the total absence of aromatase [51]. We later demonstrated that 3β-Adiol is abundant in the prostate and is a good natural ligand for ERβ
  • The overall effect of oestrogens in the immune system is determined by a balance between ERα and ERβ signalling
  • The hypothesis of our group is that ERβ plays an important role in regulating the differentiation of pluripotent haematopoietic progenitor cells whereas ERα induces proliferation
  • In tissues and cell lines of mammary epithelium for example, it has been noticed that E2 in the presence of ERα elicits proliferation, but in the presence of ERβ it inhibits proliferation
  • ERα and ERβ have distinctive tissue distributions and to the great surprise of endocrinologists [7] many tissues previously thought to be ‘oestrogen-insensitive tissues’ were found to be ERβ positive and oestrogen sensitive. The most notable of the ERα-negative ERβ-abundant tissues were the epithelium of the rodent ventral prostate [8], the granulosa cells of the ovaries [9] and the parenchyma of the lungs
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    Awesome article discusses the different balance of ER alpha and ER beta and the effects on tissue as it relates to proliferation versus differentiation.  This has clear implications in disease.  Physicians prescribing hormones without a knowledge and understanding of this are only causing potential harm to their clients.
Nathan Goodyear

Estrogen receptor beta in the prostate - 0 views

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    ER beta plays an important role in the prostate.  Loss of ER beta expression in the prostate has been shown to promote carcinogenesis.  In addition, 3-beta androstanediol, a DHT metabolite has been shown to signal through ER beta.
Nathan Goodyear

Genotoxic metabolites of estradio... [J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2003] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    study finds estrogen metabolites are involved in carcinogenesis through the production of toxic metabolites 3,4 quinones.  The presence of Estrogen receptors were associated with increased tumor growth. ER was in fact ER alpha.  What is interesting is that ER beta is not expressed these ERKO animals.  This again points to ER beta's anti proliferative action.
Nathan Goodyear

Inflammatory cause of metabolic syndrome via brain stress and NF-κB - 0 views

  • Mechanistic studies further showed that such metabolic inflammation is related to the induction of various intracellular stresses such as mitochondrial oxidative stress, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, and autophagy defect under prolonged nutritional excess
  • intracellular stress-inflammation process for metabolic syndrome has been established in the central nervous system (CNS) and particularly in the hypothalamus
  • the CNS and the comprised hypothalamus are known to govern various metabolic activities of the body including appetite control, energy expenditure, carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, and blood pressure homeostasis
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  • Reactive oxygen species (ROS) refer to a class of radical or non-radical oxygen-containing molecules that have high oxidative reactivity with lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids
  • a large measure of intracellular ROS comes from the leakage of mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC)
  • Another major source of intracellular ROS is the intentional generation of superoxides by nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase
  • there are other ROS-producing enzymes such as cyclooxygenases, lipoxygenases, xanthine oxidase, and cytochrome p450 enzymes, which are involved with specific metabolic processes
  • To counteract the toxic effects of molecular oxidation by ROS, cells are equipped with a battery of antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide dismutases, catalase, peroxiredoxins, sulfiredoxin, and aldehyde dehydrogenases
  • intracellular oxidative stress has been indicated to contribute to metabolic syndrome and related diseases, including T2D [72; 73], CVDs [74-76], neurodegenerative diseases [69; 77-80], and cancers
  • intracellular oxidative stress is highly associated with the development of neurodegenerative diseases [69] and brain aging
  • dietary obesity was found to induce NADPH oxidase-associated oxidative stress in rat brain
  • mitochondrial dysfunction in hypothalamic proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons causes central glucose sensing impairment
  • Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the cellular organelle responsible for protein synthesis, maturation, and trafficking to secretory pathways
  • unfolded protein response (UPR) machinery
  • ER stress has been associated to obesity, insulin resistance, T2D, CVDs, cancers, and neurodegenerative diseases
  • brain ER stress underlies neurodegenerative diseases
  • under environmental stress such as nutrient deprivation or hypoxia, autophagy is strongly induced to breakdown macromolecules into reusable amino acids and fatty acids for survival
  • intact autophagy function is required for the hypothalamus to properly control metabolic and energy homeostasis, while hypothalamic autophagy defect leads to the development of metabolic syndrome such as obesity and insulin resistance
  • prolonged oxidative stress or ER stress has been shown to impair autophagy function in disease milieu of cancer or aging
  • TLRs are an important class of membrane-bound pattern recognition receptors in classical innate immune defense
  • Most hypothalamic cell types including neurons and glia cells express TLRs
  • overnutrition constitutes an environmental stimulus that can activate TLR pathways to mediate the development of metabolic syndrome related disorders such as obesity, insulin resistance, T2D, and atherosclerotic CVDs
  • Isoforms TLR1, 2, 4, and 6 may be particularly pertinent to pathogenic signaling induced by lipid overnutrition
  • hypothalamic TLR4 and downstream inflammatory signaling are activated in response to central lipid excess via direct intra-brain lipid administration or HFD-feeding
  • overnutrition-induced metabolic derangements such as central leptin resistance, systemic insulin resistance, and weight gain
  • these evidences based on brain TLR signaling further support the notion that CNS is the primary site for overnutrition to cause the development of metabolic syndrome.
  • circulating cytokines can limitedly travel to the hypothalamus through the leaky blood-brain barrier around the mediobasal hypothalamus to activate hypothalamic cytokine receptors
  • significant evidences have been recently documented demonstrating the role of cytokine receptor pathways in the development of metabolic syndrome components
  • entral administration of TNF-α at low doses faithfully replicated the effects of central metabolic inflammation in enhancing eating, decreasing energy expenditure [158;159], and causing obesity-related hypertension
  • Resistin, an adipocyte-derived proinflammatory cytokine, has been found to promote hepatic insulin resistance through its central actions
  • both TLR pathways and cytokine receptor pathways are involved in central inflammatory mechanism of metabolic syndrome and related diseases.
  • In quiescent state, NF-κB resides in the cytoplasm in an inactive form due to inhibitory binding by IκBα protein
  • IKKβ activation via receptor-mediated pathway, leading to IκBα phosphorylation and degradation and subsequent release of NF-κB activity
  • Research in the past decade has found that activation of IKKβ/NF-κB proinflammatory pathway in metabolic tissues is a prominent feature of various metabolic disorders related to overnutrition
  • it happens in metabolic tissues, it is mainly associated with overnutrition-induced metabolic derangements, and most importantly, it is relatively low-grade and chronic
  • this paradigm of IKKβ/NF-κB-mediated metabolic inflammation has been identified in the CNS – particularly the comprised hypothalamus, which primarily accounts for to the development of overnutrition-induced metabolic syndrome and related disorders such as obesity, insulin resistance, T2D, and obesity-related hypertension
  • evidences have pointed to intracellular oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction as upstream events that mediate hypothalamic NF-κB activation in a receptor-independent manner under overnutrition
  • In the context of metabolic syndrome, oxidative stress-related NF-κB activation in metabolic tissues or vascular systems has been implicated in a broad range of metabolic syndrome-related diseases, such as diabetes, atherosclerosis, cardiac infarct, stroke, cancer, and aging
  • intracellular oxidative stress seems to be a likely pathogenic link that bridges overnutrition with NF-κB activation leading to central metabolic dysregulation
  • overnutrition is an environmental inducer for intracellular oxidative stress regardless of tissues involved
  • excessive nutrients, when transported into cells, directly increase mitochondrial oxidative workload, which causes increased production of ROS by mitochondrial ETC
  • oxidative stress has been shown to activate NF-κB pathway in neurons or glial cells in several types of metabolic syndrome-related neural diseases, such as stroke [185], neurodegenerative diseases [186-188], and brain aging
  • central nutrient excess (e.g., glucose or lipids) has been shown to activate NF-κB in the hypothalamus [34-37] to account for overnutrition-induced central metabolic dysregulations
  • overnutrition can present the cell with a metabolic overload that exceeds the physiological adaptive range of UPR, resulting in the development of ER stress and systemic metabolic disorders
  • chronic ER stress in peripheral metabolic tissues such as adipocytes, liver, muscle, and pancreatic cells is a salient feature of overnutrition-related diseases
  • recent literature supports a model that brain ER stress and NF-κB activation reciprocally promote each other in the development of central metabolic dysregulations
  • when intracellular stresses remain unresolved, prolonged autophagy upregulation progresses into autophagy defect
  • autophagy defect can induce NF-κB-mediated inflammation in association with the development of cancer or inflammatory diseases (e.g., Crohn's disease)
  • The connection between autophagy defect and proinflammatory activation of NF-κB pathway can also be inferred in metabolic syndrome, since both autophagy defect [126-133;200] and NF-κB activation [20-33] are implicated in the development of overnutrition-related metabolic diseases
  • Both TLR pathway and cytokine receptor pathways are closely related to IKKβ/NF-κB signaling in the central pathogenesis of metabolic syndrome
  • Overnutrition, especially in the form of HFD feeding, was shown to activate TLR4 signaling and downstream IKKβ/NF-κB pathway
  • TLR4 activation leads to MyD88-dependent NF-κB activation in early phase and MyD88-indepdnent MAPK/JNK pathway in late phase
  • these studies point to NF-κB as an immediate signaling effector for TLR4 activation in central inflammatory response
  • TLR4 activation has been shown to induce intracellular ER stress to indirectly cause metabolic inflammation in the hypothalamus
  • central TLR4-NF-κB pathway may represent one of the early receptor-mediated events in overnutrition-induced central inflammation.
  • cytokines and their receptors are both upstream activating components and downstream transcriptional targets of NF-κB activation
  • central administration of TNF-α at low dose can mimic the effect of obesity-related inflammatory milieu to activate IKKβ/NF-κB proinflammatory pathways, furthering the development of overeating, energy expenditure decrease, and weight gain
  • the physiological effects of IKKβ/NF-κB activation seem to be cell type-dependent, i.e., IKKβ/NF-κB activation in hypothalamic agouti-related protein (AGRP) neurons primarily leads to the development of energy imbalance and obesity [34]; while in hypothalamic POMC neurons, it primarily results in the development of hypertension and glucose intolerance
  • the hypothalamus, is the central regulator of energy and body weight balance [
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    Great article chronicles the biochemistry of "over nutrition" and inflammation through NF-kappaB activation and its impact on the brain.
Nathan Goodyear

Expression and Subcellular Localization of Estrogen Receptors α and β in Huma... - 0 views

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    ER alpha and ER beta expressed on fetal fat cells.  The authors of this article propose that ER alpha plays the dominant in fetal adipocyte differentiation.
Nathan Goodyear

Activation of estrogen re... [J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2007 Nov-Dec] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    It is always important to work out the biochemical mechanism of action.  Study finds Siberian Rhubarbs mechanism of action is through activation ER-beta receptors.  No activity/affinity for ER-alpha found in this study.  This is important as the ER-beta provides an anti-inflammatory, antigrowth signal.
Nathan Goodyear

ScienceDirect.com - Fertility and Sterility - Intact progesterone receptors are essenti... - 0 views

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    mice model, but progesterone deficiency results in decreased PR expression to provide counter anti-inflammatory effect in endometriosis model.  Thus pro-inflammatory transcription via E2 through ER signaling.  It would be interesting to see if that was ER-alpha or ER-beta.
Nathan Goodyear

Estrogen receptor related beta is expressed in human endometrium throughout the normal ... - 0 views

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    ER-beta found throughout both the proliferative and secretory phases of the menstrual cycle.  ER-beta expression was higher in the proliferative versus the secretory phases, though not statistically significant.  This makes since as estrogen stimulation dominates the proliferative phase.  Additionally, ER-beta expression was found throughout all levels of the endometrium and the myometrium.
Nathan Goodyear

Expression of estrogen receptors alpha and beta... [J Neurooncol. 1999] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

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    ER alpha and ER beta found to be expressed in meningiomas.  ER alpha was expressed more by the meningiomas.
Nathan Goodyear

Estrogen receptor α and β in the normal immune system and in lymphoid maligna... - 0 views

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    ER beta receptors have future in the treatment of cancer.  ER beta is a known growth inhibitor and this study proposes that ER beta is a means to aid lymphoma treatment.
Nathan Goodyear

Estrogen Receptor {beta}: Switching to a New Partner and Escaping from Estrogen -- Leun... - 0 views

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    Study shows that estradiol decreases ER beta in the prostate. ER beta is anti-inflammatory, inhibits growth, and promotes cell death: all of which would decrease risk of prostate growth and/or cancer.   We know that men increase estrogen production through increased aromatase activity, which according to this study, will decrease ER beta and the prostate associated benefits.
Nathan Goodyear

CpG hypermethylation of the promoter region inactivates the estrogen receptor... - 0 views

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    ER beta expression that is lost in prostate carcinogenesis occurs via methylation at the ER beta gene promoter sites 19CpG.  What is really interesting is that ER beta expression was present in all of the samples with BPH, but was absent in 83% of the prostate cancer samples.
Nathan Goodyear

The androgen metabolite 5alpha-androstane-3beta,17beta-diol (3betaAdiol) induces breast... - 0 views

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    Great article!!  Nice discussion of the complexity of hormones.  Women on aromatase inhibitors can make estrogen from Testosterone.  This is important with estrogen sensitive cancer as in breast cancer.  This will occur via alternative pathways: Testosterone to DHT via 5 alpha reductase and then DHT to 3 beta androstanediol via 3 beta HSD.  3 beta androstanediol is a male hormone metabolite that binds to estrogen receptors.  The affinity is less than Estradiol, but appears to have a higher affinity for ER beta over ER alpha. 
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