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Title

Aromatase and Intracrinology of Estrogen in Hormone-Dependent Tumors.

Authors

Harada, Nobuhiro

Abstract

Aromatase (estrogen synthetase) has been shown to occur in various extragonadal tissues as well as gonadal tissues, to be tissue-specifically regulated by various factors, and to play important roles in physiological functions in various tissues. The human gene is revealed to contain multiple variants of exon 1 which are tissue-specifically selected. Each exon 1 is flanked with a unique promoter region, which may explain tissue-specific transcription. All results strongly support an idea of intracrinology of estrogen. The validity of this concept is verified in connection with plasma levels of various steroid hormones and association constants of aromatase and estrogen receptor. 17β-Estradiol is locally produced through several metabolic pathways. In this context, aromatase, steroid sulfatase, estrogen sulfotransferase, and 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases I and II are considered to be important factors in the development of hormone-dependent tumors.

Subjects

AROMATASE; ESTROGEN; PARACRINE mechanisms; EXONS (Genetics); GENES

Publication

Oncology, 1999, Vol 57, p7

ISSN

0030-2414

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1159/000055270

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