About: Steroid is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 3451 publications have been published within this topic receiving 95343 citations. The topic is also known as: steroids.
TL;DR: Evidence that synergistic interactions occur between non-genomic and genomic actions of steroids is reviewed, showing that progesterone appears to be one of the most active of the steroids, and its naturally produced metabolites and some synthetic analogs show activities that are different from the parent steroid.
TL;DR: The relative quantity of these steroid receptors at the outer surfaces of cells from diverse tissues corresponds well with the capacity of a given cell to accumulate and retain oestrogen.
Abstract: OESTROGENS are more readily accumulated and retained in responsive cells than in cells that are not their targets1. Cytoplasmic macromolecules2 which specifically interact with oestradiol and other steroid hormones seem to mediate transfer of the agonist to the nuclear chromatin, where the complex is believed to promote expression of the phenotypic effects3–6. It is generally assumed that the hormone diffuses passively to “cytoplasmic” receptors which determine the cellular specificity of response7. But some experiments indicate that steroid hormones interact with components of biological membranes and may enter their respective target cells by a membrane-mediated process8–12 which is saturable and temperature-dependent13–17. We have investigated steroid-binding components associated with the plasma membranes of cells isolated from endometrium, liver and intestinal mucosa. Endometrial and liver cells show substantial binding to oestrogen immobilised by covalent linkage to an inert support, while intestinal cells have no such binding sites. The relative quantity of these steroid receptors at the outer surfaces of cells from diverse tissues corresponds well with the capacity of a given cell to accumulate and retain oestrogen.
TL;DR: The data demonstrate a potent neuroprotective activity of the antioxidant 17-beta estradiol, which may have implications for the prevention and treatment of Alzheimer's disease, and was estrogen receptor-independent.