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Submitted on January 22, 2008
Accepted on February 15, 2008
Dept. of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Menninger Dept of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77030
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: smani{at}bcm.tmc.edu.
Progesterone (P), the most biologically active "progestin" of ovarian origin, modulates numerous cellular functions in the central nervous system to coordinate physiology and reproduction. The neurobiological activity of P is mediated not by a single form of the progestin receptor (PR), but by two neural isoforms of PRs, PR-A and PR-B. Classical model of P action assumes that these neural effects are primarily mediated via their intracellular PRs, acting as transcriptional regulators, in steroid sensitive neurons, modulating genes and genomic networks. Evidence has emerged, however, that activation of neural PRs is much more diverse: four distinct classes of molecules, neurotransmitters, peptide growth factors, cyclic nucleotides and neurosteroids have been shown to activate the PRs via cross-talk and pathway convergence. In addition, rapid signaling events associated with membrane receptors and/or subpopulations of cytoplasmic PRs, via activation of protein kinase cascades, regulate PR gene expression in the cytoplasm independent of PR nuclear action. The increasing in vitro and in vivo evidence of differential transcriptional activities and co-regulator interactions between PR-A and PR-B, predict that these isoforms could have distinct roles in mediating additional and/or alternate signaling pathways within steroid sensitive neurons. In this minireview, we evaluate the available data and discuss the possible roles of the isoforms in the regulation of neurobiological processes.
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J. D. Blaustein Progesterone and Progestin Receptors in the Brain: The Neglected Ones Endocrinology, June 1, 2008; 149(6): 2737 - 2738. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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