Mechanisms of Estrogen Action

Stefan Nilsson(University of Turku), Sari Mäkelä(University of Turku), Eckardt Treuter(University of Turku), Michel Tujague(University of Turku), Jane S. Thomsen(University of Turku), Göran Andersson(University of Turku), Eva Enmark(University of Turku), Katarina Pettersson(University of Turku), Margaret Warner(University of Turku), Jan-Ακε Gustafsson(University of Turku)
Physiological Reviews
January 10, 2001
Cited by 1,978

Abstract

Our appreciation of the physiological functions of estrogens and the mechanisms through which estrogens bring about these functions has changed during the past decade. Just as transgenic mice were produced in which estrogen receptors had been inactivated and we thought that we were about to understand the role of estrogen receptors in physiology and pathology, it was found that there was not one but two distinct and functional estrogen receptors, now called ER alpha and ER beta. Transgenic mice in which each of the receptors or both the receptors are inactive have revealed a much broader role for estrogens in the body than was previously thought. This decade also saw the description of a male patient who had no functional ER alpha and whose continued bone growth clearly revealed an important function of estrogen in men. The importance of estrogen in both males and females was also demonstrated in the laboratory in transgenic mice in which the aromatase gene was inactivated. Finally, crystal structures of the estrogen receptors with agonists and antagonists have revealed much about how ligand binding influences receptor conformation and how this conformation influences interaction of the receptor with coactivators or corepressors and hence determines cellular response to ligands.


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