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Toxicity of endogenous and environmental estrogens: what is the role of elemental interactions?

Many naturally occurring and man-made chemicals present in the environment possess estrogenic activity. Examples include plant and fungal products, pesticides, plasticizers, and other agricultural and industrial chemicals. These environmental estrogens as well as endogenous ovarian estrogens are tho...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stancel, G M, Boettger-Tong, H L, Chiappetta, C, Hyder, S M, Kirkland, J L, Murthy, L, Loose-Mitchell, D S
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1995
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1518883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8593870
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author Stancel, G M
Boettger-Tong, H L
Chiappetta, C
Hyder, S M
Kirkland, J L
Murthy, L
Loose-Mitchell, D S
author_facet Stancel, G M
Boettger-Tong, H L
Chiappetta, C
Hyder, S M
Kirkland, J L
Murthy, L
Loose-Mitchell, D S
author_sort Stancel, G M
collection PubMed
description Many naturally occurring and man-made chemicals present in the environment possess estrogenic activity. Examples include plant and fungal products, pesticides, plasticizers, and other agricultural and industrial chemicals. These environmental estrogens as well as endogenous ovarian estrogens are thought to initiate their physiological actions in target tissues largely via interactions with a nuclear receptor system. The resultant estrogen-receptor complex in turn affects transcription via its interactions with nucleotide sequences known as estrogen response elements (EREs) present in the regulatory regions of hormone responsive genes. A "consensus" ERE sequence GGTCAnnnTGACC was originally identified in the vitellogenin genes of birds and amphibians, but it is now clear that most naturally occurring EREs differ from this sequence in one or more bases. We and others have obtained both in vivo and in vitro data suggesting a differential interaction of receptor complexes containing different ligands with the multiple EREs present in mammalian systems. This raises the possibility that the toxicity of environmental estrogens may arise in part from a differential pattern of ERE activation by environmental compounds relative to endogenous ovarian estrogens. The experimental basis for such a paradigm and its toxicological implications are discussed in this paper.
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spelling pubmed-15188832006-07-28 Toxicity of endogenous and environmental estrogens: what is the role of elemental interactions? Stancel, G M Boettger-Tong, H L Chiappetta, C Hyder, S M Kirkland, J L Murthy, L Loose-Mitchell, D S Environ Health Perspect Research Article Many naturally occurring and man-made chemicals present in the environment possess estrogenic activity. Examples include plant and fungal products, pesticides, plasticizers, and other agricultural and industrial chemicals. These environmental estrogens as well as endogenous ovarian estrogens are thought to initiate their physiological actions in target tissues largely via interactions with a nuclear receptor system. The resultant estrogen-receptor complex in turn affects transcription via its interactions with nucleotide sequences known as estrogen response elements (EREs) present in the regulatory regions of hormone responsive genes. A "consensus" ERE sequence GGTCAnnnTGACC was originally identified in the vitellogenin genes of birds and amphibians, but it is now clear that most naturally occurring EREs differ from this sequence in one or more bases. We and others have obtained both in vivo and in vitro data suggesting a differential interaction of receptor complexes containing different ligands with the multiple EREs present in mammalian systems. This raises the possibility that the toxicity of environmental estrogens may arise in part from a differential pattern of ERE activation by environmental compounds relative to endogenous ovarian estrogens. The experimental basis for such a paradigm and its toxicological implications are discussed in this paper. 1995-10 /pmc/articles/PMC1518883/ /pubmed/8593870 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Stancel, G M
Boettger-Tong, H L
Chiappetta, C
Hyder, S M
Kirkland, J L
Murthy, L
Loose-Mitchell, D S
Toxicity of endogenous and environmental estrogens: what is the role of elemental interactions?
title Toxicity of endogenous and environmental estrogens: what is the role of elemental interactions?
title_full Toxicity of endogenous and environmental estrogens: what is the role of elemental interactions?
title_fullStr Toxicity of endogenous and environmental estrogens: what is the role of elemental interactions?
title_full_unstemmed Toxicity of endogenous and environmental estrogens: what is the role of elemental interactions?
title_short Toxicity of endogenous and environmental estrogens: what is the role of elemental interactions?
title_sort toxicity of endogenous and environmental estrogens: what is the role of elemental interactions?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1518883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8593870
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