4.3 Article

Role of nuclear and membrane estrogen signaling pathways in the male and female reproductive tract*

期刊

DIFFERENTIATION
卷 118, 期 -, 页码 24-33

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.diff.2020.11.002

关键词

Estrogen; Uterus; Testis; Efferent ducts; Receptor

资金

  1. NIH [R01 PR015540]

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Estrogen signaling through membrane estrogen receptor1 (mESR1) is essential for normal reproductive function in both males and females. Recent research has expanded our understanding of the role of mESR1 in estrogen responses, although its precise mechanism of action remains to be fully established.
Estrogen signaling through the main estrogen receptor, estrogen receptor 1 (ESR1; also known as ER?), is essential for normal female and male reproductive function. Historically, studies of estrogen action have focused on the classical genomic pathway. Although this is clearly the major pathway for steroid hormone actions, these hormones also signal through rapid non-classical effects involving cell membrane actions. Reports of rapid effects of estrogens extend for more than half a century, but recent results have expanded understanding of the identity, structure, function and overall importance of membrane receptors in estrogen responses. Key findings in this field were the immunohistochemical detection of ESR1 in cell membranes and demonstration that a portion of newly synthesized ESR1 is routed to the membrane by palmitoylation. These receptors in the membrane can then signal through protein kinases and other mechanisms following ligand binding to alter cell function. Another crucial advance in the field was development of transgenic mice expressing normal amounts of functional nuclear ESR1 (nESR1) but lacking membrane ESR1 (mESR1). Both male and female transgenic mice lacking mESR1 were infertile as adults, and both sexes had extensive reproductive abnormalities. Transgenic mice lacking mESR1 were highly protected from deleterious effects of neonatal estrogen administration, and estrogen effects on the histone methyltransferase Enhancer of Zeste homolog 2 that are mediated through mESR1 could have significant effects on epigenetic imprinting. In summary, signaling through mESR1 is essential for normal male and female reproductive function and fertility, and is a critical enabler of normal estrogen responses in vivo. Although the precise role of mESR1 in estrogen responses remains to be established, future research in this area should clarify its mechanism of action and lead to a better understanding of how mESR1 signaling works with classical genomic signaling through nESR1 to promote full estrogenic responses.

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