<p>This volume represents the first attempt to present in one place the clinical syndromes and the pathophysiologic basis for the "resistance states" to each of the classes of steroid hormones. Glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids, androgens, estrogens, progesterone and vitamin D have widely diverse
Steroid Hormone Receptors: Basic and Clinical Aspects
β Scribed by V. K. Moudgil (auth.), V. K. Moudgil (eds.)
- Publisher
- BirkhΓ€user Basel
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 518
- Series
- Hormones in Health and Disease
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The past few years have witnessed the emergence of steroid hormones as the wonder molecules which generate as much discussion in the scientific literature as they do in a typical living room. This transition has been a result of the tremendous public and scientific interest in the normal functioning of the horΒ mones as well their suggested involvement in several clinical conditions. In the recent past, notable scientific and technological advances have been made in the areas of contraception and regulation of fertility. Steroid receptors are the indisΒ pensable mediators of hormonal responses and are complex protein molecules which appear to exist in association with other, yet undefined, proteins and/or factors. Receptors for vitamin D, retinoic acid and the thyroid hormones share structural similarities with steroid receptors, and the roster of this superfamily is still expanding. While our knowledge of the diversity and magnitude of steroid effects has advanced, the precise mode of steroid hormone action has alluded investigators. This volume brings together an international team of prominent investigators who discuss their most recent work on the basic and clinical aspects of steroid/nuclear receptors. The contributions represent updated versions of the invited presentations made at The Second Meadow Brook Conference on Steroid Receptors in Health and Disease. I am grateful to my colleagues on the Scientific Committee: Etienne Baulieu, Jack Gorski, Benita Katzenellenbogen, David Toft and James WittJiff, who provided the vision and guidance in formulating an outΒ standing program.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiv
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Steroid/Nuclear Receptor Superfamily: Recent Advances and Relation to Health and Disease....Pages 3-44
Front Matter....Pages 45-45
Structural and Functional Studies of Selective DNA Binding by Steroid/Nuclear Receptors....Pages 47-73
Estrogen Receptor Induced DNA Bending....Pages 75-105
The Nuclear Environment and Estrogen Action....Pages 107-129
Functional Interaction of the Estrogen Receptor with the Tissue-Specific, Homeodomain Transcription Factor, PIT-1....Pages 131-161
Insights into the Genomic Mechanism of Action of 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D 3 ....Pages 163-191
Molecular Mechanisms of Thyroid Hormone and Retinoic acid Action....Pages 193-211
Front Matter....Pages 213-213
Heat Shock Proteins and the Cytoplasmic-Nuclear Trafficking of Steroid Receptors....Pages 215-246
In Vitro Assembly of the Avian Progesterone Receptor....Pages 247-260
Steroid Receptor Associated Proteins: Heat Shock Protein 90 and P59 Immunophilin....Pages 261-280
Estrogenic and Developmental Regulation of 90-Kilodalton Heat Shock Protein Gene Expression....Pages 281-305
Front Matter....Pages 305-305
Phosphorylation and Progesterone Receptor Function....Pages 309-332
Estrogen Receptor Activation by Ligand-Dependent and Ligand-Independent Pathways....Pages 333-356
Why are Steroid Receptor Antagonists Sometimes Agonists?....Pages 357-375
Ligand Requirements for Estrogen Receptor Function and the Actions of Antiestrogens....Pages 377-404
Front Matter....Pages 405-405
Molecular Biological Aspects of the Human Androgen Receptor Relating to Disease....Pages 407-426
Estrogen Receptor Variants in Breast Cancer....Pages 427-444
Front Matter....Pages 445-445
Human Bone Cells: Newly Discovered Target Cells for Sex Steroids....Pages 447-472
Characteristics of the Human Estrogen Receptor Protein Produced in Microbial Expression Systems....Pages 473-501
The Ah Locus: A Review....Pages 503-509
Back Matter....Pages 511-522
β¦ Subjects
General Practice / Family Medicine
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