Glucocorticoid Hormone Receptors

Author(s):  
E. BRAD THOMPSON ◽  
BAHIRU GAMETCHU
1995 ◽  
Vol 131 (4) ◽  
pp. 1095-1103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z Feng ◽  
A Marti ◽  
B Jehn ◽  
H J Altermatt ◽  
G Chicaiza ◽  
...  

Milk production during lactation is a consequence of the suckling stimulus and the presence of glucocorticoids, prolactin, and insulin. After weaning the glucocorticoid hormone level drops, secretory mammary epithelial cells die by programmed cell death and the gland is prepared for a new pregnancy. We studied the role of steroid hormones and prolactin on the mammary gland structure, milk protein synthesis, and on programmed cell death. Slow-release plastic pellets containing individual hormones were implanted into a single mammary gland at lactation. At the same time the pups were removed and the consequences of the release of hormones were investigated histologically and biochemically. We found a local inhibition of involution in the vicinity of deoxycorticosterone- and progesterone-release pellets while prolactin-release pellets were ineffective. Dexamethasone, a very stable and potent glucocorticoid hormone analogue, inhibited involution and programmed cell death in all the mammary glands. It led to an accumulation of milk in the glands and was accompanied by an induction of protein kinase A, AP-1 DNA binding activity and elevated c-fos, junB, and junD mRNA levels. Several potential target genes of AP-1 such as stromelysin-1, c-jun, and SGP-2 that are induced during normal involution were strongly inhibited in dexamethasone-treated animals. Our results suggest that the cross-talk between steroid hormone receptors and AP-1 previously described in cells in culture leads to an impairment of AP-1 activity and to an inhibition of involution in the mammary gland implying that programmed cell death in the postlactational mammary gland depends on functional AP-1.


Author(s):  
Herbert H. Samuels ◽  
Juan Casanova ◽  
Zebulun D. Horowitz ◽  
Bruce M. Raaka ◽  
Lawrence E. Shapiro ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 76 (2) ◽  
pp. 295-306 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Coustaut ◽  
V. Pallet ◽  
H. Garcin ◽  
P. Higueret

The properties of nuclear receptors belonging to the superfamily of receptors acting as transcription factors are modulated by nutritional and hormonal conditions. We showed recently that retinoic acid (RA) restored to normal the expression of receptors attenuated by hypothyroidism. The present study was designed to find out whether dietary vitamin A (as retinol) had the same effect. Propylthiouracil in drinking water induced both hypothyroidism and a vitamin A-deficient status in rats. The maximum binding capacity (Cmax) of triiodothyronine nuclear receptors (TR) was unchanged, while that of nuclear RA receptors (RAR) and nuclear glucocorticoid hormone receptors (GRn) was reduced in the liver of these hypothyroid rats. The reduced Cmax of RAR stemmed from a lower level of RAR mRNA, while the reduced Cmax of GRn was assumed to be due to reduced translocation of the receptor from the cytosol to the nucleus. Feeding the hypothyroid rats with a vitamin A-rich diet did not restore the Cmax of either RAR or GRn to normal. The lack of effect of dietary retinol on RAR expression may be attributed to either genomic (unoccupied TR block the expression of RAR genes) and/or extragenomic (hypothyroidism decreases the availability of retinol and/or its metabolism to RA) mechanisms. Triiodothyronine is thought to favour the translocation of glucocorticoid hormone receptors from cytosol to nucleus. These findings provide more information on the relationship between vitamin A and hormonal status, showing that a vitamin A-rich diet is without apparent effect on the expression of nuclear receptors in hypothyroid rats.


2000 ◽  
Vol 79 (5) ◽  
pp. 299-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
Klaus Scheller ◽  
Constantin E. Sekeris ◽  
Georg Krohne ◽  
Robert Hock ◽  
Immo A. Hansen ◽  
...  

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