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Structure-activity relationships of estrogens.

The last 50 years has seen an exponential rise in the published reports about estrogen action. The model to describe the early events in the mechanism of action of estrogens via the estrogen receptor is updated in this paper to incorporate some of the recent data on the subcellular localization of t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jordan, V C, Mittal, S, Gosden, B, Koch, R, Lieberman, M E
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1985
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1568776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3905383
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author Jordan, V C
Mittal, S
Gosden, B
Koch, R
Lieberman, M E
author_facet Jordan, V C
Mittal, S
Gosden, B
Koch, R
Lieberman, M E
author_sort Jordan, V C
collection PubMed
description The last 50 years has seen an exponential rise in the published reports about estrogen action. The model to describe the early events in the mechanism of action of estrogens via the estrogen receptor is updated in this paper to incorporate some of the recent data on the subcellular localization of the receptor. New evidence suggests that the receptor is a nuclear protein, so it appears that estrogens must first diffuse into the nuclear compartment to initiate estrogen action via the receptor complex. This review traces the development of potent estrogenic compounds by the study of their structure-activity relationships. Studies of structure-activity relationships in vivo using Allen Doisy or 3-day uterine weight tests can provide much valuable information, but the assays suffer from the complex problems of pharmacokinetics and metabolic transformation. Studies in vitro using primary cultures of rat pituitary or uterine cells to assay the ability of a compound to induce prolactin synthesis or progesterone receptor synthesis, respectively, can provide essential information about the structural requirements for a compound to produce estrogenic effects. Nevertheless, it should be pointed out that studies in vivo are required to determine whether a compound is metabolically activated to an estrogen. Estrogen receptor binding models are presented to describe the changes in a molecule that will predict high affinity for the ligand and agonist, partial agonist and antagonist properties of the ligand-receptor complex. Most estrogenic pesticides and phytoestrogens comform to the predictions of the estrogen receptor binding model.
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spelling pubmed-15687762006-09-18 Structure-activity relationships of estrogens. Jordan, V C Mittal, S Gosden, B Koch, R Lieberman, M E Environ Health Perspect Research Article The last 50 years has seen an exponential rise in the published reports about estrogen action. The model to describe the early events in the mechanism of action of estrogens via the estrogen receptor is updated in this paper to incorporate some of the recent data on the subcellular localization of the receptor. New evidence suggests that the receptor is a nuclear protein, so it appears that estrogens must first diffuse into the nuclear compartment to initiate estrogen action via the receptor complex. This review traces the development of potent estrogenic compounds by the study of their structure-activity relationships. Studies of structure-activity relationships in vivo using Allen Doisy or 3-day uterine weight tests can provide much valuable information, but the assays suffer from the complex problems of pharmacokinetics and metabolic transformation. Studies in vitro using primary cultures of rat pituitary or uterine cells to assay the ability of a compound to induce prolactin synthesis or progesterone receptor synthesis, respectively, can provide essential information about the structural requirements for a compound to produce estrogenic effects. Nevertheless, it should be pointed out that studies in vivo are required to determine whether a compound is metabolically activated to an estrogen. Estrogen receptor binding models are presented to describe the changes in a molecule that will predict high affinity for the ligand and agonist, partial agonist and antagonist properties of the ligand-receptor complex. Most estrogenic pesticides and phytoestrogens comform to the predictions of the estrogen receptor binding model. 1985-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1568776/ /pubmed/3905383 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Jordan, V C
Mittal, S
Gosden, B
Koch, R
Lieberman, M E
Structure-activity relationships of estrogens.
title Structure-activity relationships of estrogens.
title_full Structure-activity relationships of estrogens.
title_fullStr Structure-activity relationships of estrogens.
title_full_unstemmed Structure-activity relationships of estrogens.
title_short Structure-activity relationships of estrogens.
title_sort structure-activity relationships of estrogens.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1568776/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3905383
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