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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Transport of Steroid Hormones Through the Rat Blood-Brain Barrier. Primary Role of Albumin-Bound Hormone

William M. Pardridge, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1979 - 
- Vol. 64, Iss: 1, pp 145-154
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TLDR
The data demonstrate the selective permeability properties of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) to the major steroid hormones is proportional to the tendency of the steroid to partition in a polar lipid phase and is inversely related to the number of hydrogen bond-forming functional groups on the steroid nucleus.
Abstract
These studies were undertaken to investigate (a) the permeability properties of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) to the major gonadal and adrenal steroid hormones, and (b) the role of the binding proteins of plasma (albumin and specific globulins) in the regulation of BBB steroid hormone transport. The permeability of the BBB to [(3)H]-labeled progesterone, testosterone, estradiol, corticosterone, aldosterone, and cortisol, was measured relative to [(14)C]butanol, a freely diffusable reference, in the barbiturate anesthetized rat using a tissue sampling-single injection technique. The isotopes were rapidly injected in a 200-mul bolus of Ringer's solution (0.1 g/dl albumin) via the common carotid artery and the percent extraction of unidirectional influx of hormone was determined after a single pass through brain: progesterone, 83+/-4%; testosterone, 85+/-1%; estradiol, 83+/-3%; corticosterone, 39+/-2%; aldosterone, 3.5+/-0.8%; and cortisol, 1.4+/-0.3%. The selective permeability of the BBB was inversely related to the number of hydrogen bonds each steroid formed in aqueous solution and directly related to the respective 1-octanol/Ringer's partition coefficient. When the bolus injection was 67% human serum, >95% of the labeled steroid was bound as determined by equilibrium dialysis. However, the influx of the steroids through the BBB was inhibited by human serum to a much less extent than would be expected if only the free (dialyzable) hormone was transported; progesterone, estradiol, testosterone, and corticosterone transport was inhibited 18, 47, 70, and 85% respectively, or in proportion to the steroid binding to plasma globulins. Rat serum (67%) only inhibited the transport of these four hormones, 0, 13, 12, and 69%, respectively, reflecting the absence of a sex hormone-binding globulin in rat plasma. However, neonatal rat serum (67%) inhibited progesterone, testosterone, and estradiol transport 0, 0, and 91%, respectively, consistent with the presence of an estradiol-binding protein in neonatal rat serum. The binding of steroid hormone to bovine albumin in vitro (as determined by equilibrium dialysis) was compared to albumin binding in vivo (as determined by the single injection technique). The ratio of apparent dissociation constant in vivo, K(D)(app), to the in vitro K(D) was: >>200 for progesterone, >200 for testosterone, 120 for estradiol, and 7.7 for corticosterone. Assuming the steady-state condition, the K(D)(app)/K(D) was found to be proportional to the BBB permeability for each steroid. These data demonstrate (a) the selective permeability properties of the BBB to the major steroid hormones is proportional to the tendency of the steroid to partition in a polar lipid phase and is inversely related to the number of hydrogen bond-forming functional groups on the steroid nucleus; (b) the presence of albumin in serum may bind considerable quantities of steroid hormone, but exerts little inhibitory effects on the transport of steroids into brain, whereas globulin-bound hormone does not appear to be transported into brain to a significant extent. Therefore, the hormone fraction in plasma that is available for transport into brain is not restricted to the free (dialyzable) fraction, but includes the larger albumin-bound moiety.

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References
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Steroid-Protein Interactions

TL;DR: The species specificity which had been observed in rat and human transcortin for the species specific corticosteroid has not been found to be a general phenomenon.
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Lower limits of cerebrovascular permeability to nonelectrolytes in the conscious rat

TL;DR: Estimated cerebral distribution volumes for the tracers indicate that glycerol distributes rapidly within the brain extracellular and intracellular compartments and may be incorporated into the metabolic pool, and that sucrose remains within the extacellular space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lipid solubility and drug penetration of the blood brain barrier.

TL;DR: Lipid/water partition coefficients of 19 radiolabeled drugs were correlated with uptake by brain during a single microcirculatory passage following carotid arterial injection, suggesting there is probably little reason to greatly exceed this degree of lipid solubility when designing drugs for blood-brain barrier penetration and central nervous system effects.
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Kinetics of competitive inhibition of neutral amino acid transport across the blood-brain barrier

TL;DR: The transport of tryptophan across the blood‐brain barrier is used as a specific example of a general approach by which rates of amino acid influx into brain may be predicted from existing concentrations of amino acids in plasma.
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