Journal article

Role of sex steroids and their receptors in human preterm infants: Impacts on future treatment strategies for cerebral development


Authors listHuebner, Stephanie; Reich, Bettina; Heckmann, Matthias

Publication year2015

Pages556-563

JournalBiochemical Pharmacology

Volume number98

Issue number4

ISSN0006-2952

eISSN1873-2968

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2015.08.093

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
Preterm birth is a major risk factor for cerebral complications, such as hemorrhage or periventricular leukomalacia, which lead to lifelong neurodevelopmental deficits. Hypoxia/ischemia, inflammation, hyperoxia, and prematurity itself contribute to the extent of impaired neurodevelopment. Preterm birth leads to disruption of the placental supply of estrogens and progesterone. Postnatally, the plasma levels of estrogens and progesterone drop 100-fold. Preterm infants are deprived of the placental supply of these hormones for up to sixteen weeks. Thus, supplementation of estradiol and progesterone to mimic intrauterine conditions may potentially improve a premature infant's extrauterine development and help protect the brain against neurological complications. However, preliminary clinical studies did not find improved outcomes except for a trend towards less cerebral palsy. The decrease in estrogen and progesterone concentrations is accompanied by persistent, high postnatal production of fetal zone steroids, mainly dehydroepiandrosterone, which serve as precursors for maternal estrogen synthesis during pregnancy. This commentary will combine knowledge from endocrinology, pharmacology, and neonatology to explain the discrepancies between promising animal models and clinical findings. Most important targets will be classical and non-classical estrogen receptors, which interact differently not only with estrogens but also with fetal zone steroids. The fetal zone is unique among humans and higher primates. Therefore, a clearly defined model is required to study the role of sex steroids and their receptors before further clinical studies begin. (C) 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleHuebner, S., Reich, B. and Heckmann, M. (2015) Role of sex steroids and their receptors in human preterm infants: Impacts on future treatment strategies for cerebral development, Biochemical Pharmacology, 98(4), pp. 556-563. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2015.08.093

APA Citation styleHuebner, S., Reich, B., & Heckmann, M. (2015). Role of sex steroids and their receptors in human preterm infants: Impacts on future treatment strategies for cerebral development. Biochemical Pharmacology. 98(4), 556-563. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bcp.2015.08.093



Keywords


brain developmentDehydroepiandrosteroneDEVELOPING BRAINDEVELOPING WHITE-MATTERestrogen receptorFETAL ADRENAL-CORTEXFetal zone steroidsFULL-TERM INFANTSG-PROTEINHormone replacement therapyHYPEROXIA-INDUCED APOPTOSISHYPOXIA-ISCHEMIAPROGESTERONE REPLACEMENT


SDG Areas


Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 01:55