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Estrogen complexes

Cardinali, D. P. (1977). Nuclear receptor estrogen complex in the pineal gland. Modulation by sympathetic nerves. Neuroendocrinology 24, 333-46. [Pg.303]

Other early articles in Newsweek (March 21,1994, The Estrogen Complex ), Time (March 18,1996, What s Wrong with Our Sperm ), Science News (January 8,1994, The Gender Benders, and January 22, 1994, That Feminine Touch ), and a British television special entitled Assault on the Male forecast a gloomy future for mankind ... [Pg.108]

S. Begley, with D. Glick. The Estrogen Complex. Newsweek, March 21,1994. [Pg.191]

Pickar JH, Yeh I-T, Bachmann G, Speroff L. Endometrial effects of a tissue selective estrogen complex containing bazedoxifene/conjugated estrogens as a menopausal therapy. Fertil Steril 2009 92 1018-24. [Pg.875]

Female sexual development and behaviour in mammals occurs by default and requires no ovarian secretion, and it is only in genetic males that the testis can secrete hormones which destroy this female pattern and superimpose that of the male. Sexual differentiation is not so well defined in fish, and larval exposure to both synthetic estrogens and androgens is widely used in aquaculture to produce monosex cultures. Endocrine disruption of sexual differentiation in fish may therefore reflect both the complexity and diversity of such processes between different species. Some care is required in use of the terms hermaphrodite and sex-reversal since a true hermaphrodite has both functional testes and ovaries and a sex-reversed fish is fully functional as its final sex—both produce the appropriate viable gametes. Such functional sex-reversal is not possible in mammals, but in some species of fish it is the normal developmental pattern. In most of the cases of hermaphroditism or sex-reversal reported in the non-scientific press, there is evidence only for a few ovarian follicles within a functional testis. This may be considered as feminisation or a form of intersex, and is very clearly endocrine disruption, but it is certainly neither sex-reversal nor hermaphroditism. In some cases the terms have even been used to infer induction of a single female characteristic such as production of yolk-protein by males. [Pg.41]

Although estrone and estradiol (26) have both been isolated from human urine, it has recently been shown that it is the latter that is the active compound that binds to the so-called estrogen receptor protein. Reduction of estrone with any of a large number of reducing agents (for example, any of the complex metal hydrides) leads cleanly to estradiol. This high degree of stereoselectivity to afford the product of attack at the alpha side of the molecule is characteristic of many reactions of steroids. [Pg.161]

The sheer complexity of environmental mixtnres of EDCs, possible interactive effects, and capacity of some EDCs to bioaccumulate (e.g., in fish, steroidal estrogens and alkylphenolic chemicals have been shown to be concentrated up to 40,000-fold in the bile [Larsson et al. 1999 Gibson et al. 2005]) raises questions about the adequacy of the risk assessment process and safety margins established for EDCs. There is little question that considerable further work is needed to generate a realistic pictnre of the mixture effects and exposure threats of EDCs to wildlife populations than has been derived from studies on individual EDCs. Further discussion of the toxicity of mixtures will be found in Chapter 2, Section 2.6. [Pg.284]

Filby, A.L., Neuparth, T., and Thorpe, K.L. et al. (2007a). Health impacts of estrogens in the environment, considering complex mixture effects. Environmental Health Perspectives 115, 1704-1710. [Pg.347]

Estrogens are formed by the aromatization of androgens in a complex process that involves three hydroxyla-tion steps, each of which requires O2 and NADPH. The aromatase enzyme complex is thought to include a P450 monooxygenase. Estradiol is formed if the substrate of this enzyme complex is testosterone, whereas estrone results from the aromatization of androstenedione. [Pg.442]

Pyridoxal phosphate is a coenzyme for many enzymes involved in amino acid metabolism, especially in transamination and decarboxylation. It is also the cofactor of glycogen phosphorylase, where the phosphate group is catalytically important. In addition, vitamin Bg is important in steroid hormone action where it removes the hormone-receptor complex from DNA binding, terminating the action of the hormones. In vitamin Bg deficiency, this results in increased sensitivity to the actions of low concentrations of estrogens, androgens, cortisol, and vitamin D. [Pg.491]

Some tumors are estrogen-dependent and the use of an antiestrogen has therapeutic value. One such antineoplastic agent appears to be patterned after clomiphene. Complex aryl ketone 204 is treated with phenyl magnesium chloride and the resulting tertiary... [Pg.127]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.39 ]




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