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Pregnenolone

About: Pregnenolone is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 3539 publications have been published within this topic receiving 126444 citations. The topic is also known as: (3b)-3-hydroxy-Pregn-5-en-20-one & 3-Hydroxypregn-5-en-20-one.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The modulation of ovarian steroidogenesis by epidermal growth factor (EGF) was investigated in cultured rat granulosa cells and the effects of EGF were shown to be time-dependent.

136 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2015-Steroids
TL;DR: Skin is a neuroendocrine organ endowed with steroid/secosteroidogenic activities and establishment of which intermediates are produced in the epidermis in vivo and whether they circulate on the systemic level represent a future research challenge.

136 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Lipoid CAH was first described in detail as an inherited endocrine disorder by Prader and colleagues and was widely recognized until Camacho et al. (1968) reported an apparently milder case, with the onset of clinically apparent salt loss at 8 months of age.
Abstract: Lipoid CAH was first described in detail as an inherited endocrine disorder by Prader and colleagues (Prader & Gurtner 1955, Prader & Siebenmann 1957, Prader & Anders 1962), although at least four autopsy cases appeared earlier in the pathology literature (Tilp 1913, Brutschy 1920, Zahn 1948, Sandison 1955). Prader’s group described male pseudohermaphroditism, an apparent lack of adrenal steroids and accumulation of lipid deposits in the adrenal, inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion. Written in German, Prader’s work was not widely recognized until Camacho et al. (1968) reported an apparently milder case, with the onset of clinically apparent salt loss at 8 months of age, and postulated that the disorder was in one of the enzymes involved in the conversion of cholesterol to pregnenolone. However, the nature of the defect was unclear, in part because the enzymology of the conversion of cholesterol to pregnenolone was unclear. At that time it was thought that the conversion of cholesterol to pregnenolone required at least three enzymes, a 20a-hydroxylase, a 22-hydroxylase, and a 20,22 desmolase (Shimizu et al. 1961), and that lipoid CAH was due to a defect in one of these enzymes. Degenhart et al. (1972) were the first to study lipoid CAH in vitro, by comparing the production of pregnenolone by mitochondria from the adrenals of affected and unaffected infants. Mitochondria from affected tissue could not convert cholesterol to pregnenolone (although normal mitochondria could), but affected mitochondria could convert 20a-hydroxycholesterol to pregnenolone. They logically concluded that the defect was in a specific 20a-hydroxylase; this conclusion was incorrect, but the experimental design was prescient: 23 years later we used a similar experiment to prove that lipoid CAH was due to a mutation in a non-enzymatic protein (Lin et al. 1995). Koizumi et al. (1977) also found that affected mitochondria failed to convert cholesterol to pregnenolone but were unable to account for Degenhart’s findings. By this time it was clear that the conversion of cholesterol to pregnenolone was catalyzed by a mitochondrial cytochrome P450 enzyme, termed P450scc, (where scc denotes side chain cleavage), which functions as the terminal oxidase in a mitochondrial electron-transfer chain where NADPH donated electrons to a flavoprotein (adrenodoxin reductase) which then transferred them to an iron-sulfur protein (adrenodoxin) which in turn donated them to P450scc (Kimura & Suzuki 1965, Omura et al. 1966, Shikita & Hall 1973) (for review see Miller 1988). Thus Koizumi examined the total P450 in the affected adrenal mitochondria in the only fashion then available, by carbon monoxide-induced difference spectra, and concluded that affected mitochondria had roughly half of the normal amount of total cytochrome P450. At that time it was known that steroid 11â-hydroxylase and 18-hydroxylase activities were also catalyzed by a mitochondrial P450, and as the affected mitochondria had normal 11â-/18-hydroxylase activity but failed to convert cholesterol to pregnenolone, Koizumi et al. (1977) logically concluded that the 227

136 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The patterns and levels of the steroids observed in the adrenalectomized subject suggest the following when compared to patterns and Levels of the same steroids during menstrual cycles of intact women.
Abstract: In order to assess the ovarian contribution to peripheral steroid levels during the menstrual cycle, the serum levels of various steroids were measured daily during a complete menstrual cycle in a bilaterally adrenalectomized woman. The following steroids were measured: progesterone (P), 17-hydroxyprogesterone (17-OHP), pregnenolone (5Δ-P), 17-hydroxypregnenolone (17-5Δ-P), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), it's sulfate (DHEA-S), testosterone (T), 5α-dihydrotestosterone (DHT), androstenedione (A), estrone (E1), estradiol-17β (E2), and cortisol. Plasma cortisol and 17-5Δ-P were undetectable throughout most of the study period. However, the remaining steroids studied were measurable. The patterns and levels of the steroids observed in the adrenalectomized subject suggest the following when compared to patterns and levels of the same steroids during menstrual cycles of intact women. The progestins, P and 17-OHP, are secreted by the ovary not only during the luteal phase but also throughout the follicul...

136 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Inactive doses of the neuroactive steroids markedly enhanced the anticonvulsant effects of diazepam against pentylenetetrazol without significantly increasing motor toxicity.
Abstract: Epilepsy continues to be a significant clinical problem as current medications neither adequately control seizures nor are free of untoward side-effects. Modulation of the neuroactive steroid site on the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)A receptor complex may be an important new direction for pharmaceutical interventions in epilepsy. In this study we evaluated the protective actions of four neuroactive steroids, 3alpha-hydroxy-5alpha-pregnan-20-one, the 3beta-methylated analog, ganaxolone (3alpha-hydroxy-3beta-methyl-5alpha-pregnan-20-one), 3alpha-hydroxy-5beta-pregnan-20-one and Co 2-1068 (3beta-(4acetylphenyl)ethynyl-3alpha,21-dihydroxy-5beta++ +-20-one-21-hemisuccinate), against several standard convulsive tests in male, Swiss-Webster mice. Consistent with their GABAergic actions, the neuroactive steroids as well as diazepam and phenobarbital dose-dependently protected against clonic convulsions induced by pentylenetetrazol; the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist, dizocilpine, was ineffective. In contrast to diazepam and phenobarbital, however, all of the neuroactive steroids and dizocilpine produced full protection against cocaine-induced convulsions. Some of the neuroactive steroids, as well as dizocilpine, were efficacious against the seizures and lethality induced by N-methyl-D-aspartate. Pregnenolone, a steroid devoid of GABAergic activity, was not effective in any of the convulsant models. Although all of the compounds produced motor toxicity in high doses as measured by the inverted-screen test, the neuroactive steroids demonstrated an equivalent or improved separation between anticonvulsant potency and motoric impairment. Inactive doses of the neuroactive steroids markedly enhanced the anticonvulsant effects of diazepam against pentylenetetrazol without significantly increasing motor toxicity. This adjunct treatment resulted in protective indices ranging from 60 to 360 compared to 12 for diazepam alone. The distinct profile of anticonvulsant activity of the neuroactive steroids may be related to their combined actions on gamma-aminobutyric acid, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors, or voltage-operated Ca++ channels. These results help to define the neuroactive steroids as a novel class of antiepileptic agents and suggest their potential in clinical practice.

136 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202344
202255
202124
202028
201950
201835