sex hormones Flashcards

1
Q

how does the luciferase assay work

A

used to identify ligands for particular receptors
regulatory region of gene of interest cloned upstream of luciferase gene
candidate ligand can bind to receptor and cause gene expression -> detection of light to determine ligand binding

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2
Q

how to determine target gene of a nuclear receptor

A

clone potential target gene promoters upstream of luciferase gene
test for activation/repression in response to ligand

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3
Q

FXR: ligand, target gene and actions

A

bile acids bind to FXR -> expression of FGF15/19 -> glycogenesis, decreased gluconeogenesis; potential diabetic drug (insulin-independent)

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4
Q

FGF21:

  1. transcription stimulated by?
  2. signals via:
  3. effects (3)
A
  1. PPARalpha
  2. beta-klotho
  3. FGF21 decreases SCN vasopressin expression and AVPV Kiss1 expression -> suppression of female reproduction (as part of adaptive starvation response)
    weight loss and insulin sensitivity in diabetic and obese rodents and humans
    induces CRH -> increased sympathetic nerve activity
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5
Q

how are floxed genes used to produce tissue-specific KOs

A

e. g. delete βklotho seletively in SCN to see if rescues fertility:
1. Generate ‘floxed’ βKlotho mice: βKlotho gene sandwiched between 2 lox P sites (in every cell of mouse)
2. Generate second mouse w cre recombinase under SCN specific promoter ∴ enzyme only made in SCN
3. Cross 2 mice → Cre recombinase causes DNA to fold and excises gene between lox P sites (only in SCN)

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6
Q

actions of progesterone (10 targets)

A

endometrium: implantation, decidualisation
myometrium: suppresses uterine contractility
ovary: ovulation, luteinisation
bone: prevention of bone loss
breast: proliferation, lobular alveolar development
brain: increased sexual behaviour
sperm: acrosome reaction
oocyte: maturation
vascular: decreased platelet aggregation, vasodilatation
immune: decreased T cells

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7
Q

progesterone receptor isoform functions in humans

A

PR-A: high levels antagonise effects of P4

PR-B: high levels mediate effects of P4

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8
Q

progesterone intracellular signalling (5 pathways)

A

receptor signalling mechanisms poorly understood
1. classical: progesterone binds to intracellular PR, dimerises and binds to progesterone response element (promoter), recruits coactivators/corepressors and RNA pol -> gene expression
2. alternative: PR binding to receptor -> c-Src cascade -> MAPK -> recruitment of different transcription factors e.g. CREB -> binds to CRE (cAMP response element)
3. transmembrane receptor: progesterone receptor membrane component (PGRMC-1) -> enters cell in vesicle -> calcium influx -> downstream cascades
PGRMC-1 also forms complex w plasminogen activator inhibitor RNA binding protein-1 (PAIRBP-1); function unknown
4. inhibitory: progesterone binds to GPCR -> decreased cAMP -> decreased CREB

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9
Q

regulation of decidualisation

A

convergence of P4 and cAMP pathways

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10
Q

indications for androgen replacement therapy in females

A

decreased sexual desire, arousal and orgasm

decreased testosterone can also affect mood, bone and muscle mass

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11
Q

nuclear receptor: AF1 and AF2 functions

A

contribute to transcriptional activity of nuclear receptor
AF1: independent of ligand-binding
AF2: part of LBD, dependent on ligand binding

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12
Q

nuclear receptor: DNA binding domain structure

A

2 zinc finger motifs -> can bind to palindromic sequence

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13
Q

nuclear receptors: pioneer factors

  1. function
  2. examples
A

transcription factors that can directly bind condensed chromatin
e.g. FOXA1, GATA3

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14
Q

benefits of HRT (4)

A
  1. reduced vasomotor symptoms: hot flushes, night sweats
  2. reduced : mood swings, anxiety
  3. reduced risk of osteoporosis
  4. CV effects: decreased BP, cholesterol, centripetal fat
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15
Q

risks of HRT (3)

A

breast cancer, stroke, thrombo-embolism

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16
Q

androgen receptor signalling

A
  1. Testosterone bound by SHBG (sex hormone binding globulin) in circulation
  2. Testosterone: lipophilic, diffuses across membrane
  3. 5α-reducatse converts to DHT (more potent androgen)
  4. AR sits in cytoplasm complexed w heat shock proteins (act as chaperone proteins: change conformation so that ligand can bind easily)
  5. Binding of DHT to AR → release of heat shock proteins from receptor, conformational change, dimerisation
  6. Dimerisation exposes nuclear localisation sequence → signals to be transported to nucleus
  7. Complex binds to DNA ARE (androgen response element)
  8. Recruit transcriptional machinery and coactivators/repressors
17
Q

oestrogen regulated genes

A

Progesterone Receptor (PR)
Cyclin D1 (cell cycle regulation)
c-myc (cell survival)
TGF-α (growth factor)

18
Q

oestrogen receptor signalling

A
  1. oestrogen diffuses across cell membrane and binds to ER
  2. release of hsps and dimerisation
  3. binding to palindromic ORE
  4. transcription and translation
19
Q

nuclear receptor structure

A

N-terminal domain, DBD, hinge region, LBD, C- terminus

  1. N-terminal domain: recruits transcription machinery
    a. AF-1: constitutively active w/o ligand binding, cofactor recruitment
  2. DBD: DNA binding domain, 2 zinc fingers, direct binding to promoters
  3. Hinge region: contains nuclear localisation signal (NLS) → nuclear translocation
  4. LBD: important for ligand binding and receptor dimerization
    a. AF-2: ligand dependent activity, cofactor binding, stabilisation of dimer