Publication:
Placental steroids in cattle: Hormones, placental growth factors or by-products of trophoblast giant cell differentiation?

dc.contributor.authorSchuler, Gerhard
dc.contributor.authorGreven, Helga
dc.contributor.authorKowalewski, Mariusz Pawel
dc.contributor.authorHoffmann, Bernd
dc.contributor.authorDoering, Barbara
dc.contributor.buuauthorÖzalp, Gözde Rabia
dc.contributor.departmentUludağ Üniversites
dc.contributor.departmentVeteriner Fakültesi
dc.contributor.departmentKadın Hastalıkları ve Doğum Ana Bilim Dalı
dc.contributor.orcid0000-0003-4694-6937
dc.contributor.researcheridAAE-3607-2019
dc.contributor.scopusid8555276100
dc.date.accessioned2021-12-01T08:23:03Z
dc.date.available2021-12-01T08:23:03Z
dc.date.issued2008-07
dc.description.abstractThe bovine placenta produces large amounts of steroids, mainly estrone (E1) and progesterone (P-4). Specific features of bovine placental steroidogenesis are I) the expression of all enzymes needed for the production of estrogens from cholesterol in the trophoblast 2) an only marginal and temporal contribution to peripheral maternal P4 levels restricted to a period between approx. days 150-240 of gestation 3) the predominance of sulfoconjugated over free El and 4) a complementary setting of steroidogenic enzymes in the two morphologically discriminable trophoblast cell types, the uninucleated trophoblast cells (UTC) and the trophoblast giant cells (TGC). In cattle so far no definite information is available on the specific biological roles of placental estrogens and P4. However, the detection of estrogen receptors and progesterone receptors in the placentomes Suggests a role primarily as local regulators of caruncular growth, differentiation and functions. Inconsistent with a function as a caruncular growth factor is the strong evidence that in cattle placental estrogens enter the maternal compartment almost completely as estrone Sulfate (EIS), which is not active at classical nuclear receptors. Oil the other hand, E IS may be converted locally to free active estrogens via the action of steroid sulfatase (StS), which has been detected in specific parts of the bovine carancular epithelium. Alternatively or in addition, StS expression in the caruncular epithelium may serve the utilization of sulfated neutral steroid precursors (e.g. pregrienolone sulfate or cholesterol sulfate) supplied with maternal blood, thus providing free substrates for further metabolization in the adjacent trophoblast. The down-regulation of P450scc and P450c17 and the Up-regulation of 3B-HSD and aromatase during the differentiation of TGC from UTC in parallel with the up-regulation of ERE and estrogen sulfotransferase in maturing TGC suggests a function of placental estrogens primarily as auto-or intracrine regulators during this process and assigns to conjugated placental estrogens a role as inactivated by-products of TGC differentiation intended for excretion. Collectively, despite some evidence from recent studies for putative roles of placental steroids in cattle their exact functions in the bovine species remain still undefined.
dc.description.sponsorshipGerman Research Foundation (DFG)
dc.description.sponsorshipThe Ewald and Hilde Berge Foundation
dc.identifier.citationSchuler, G. vd. (2008) ''Placental steroids in cattle: Hormones, placental growth factors or by-products of trophoblast giant cell differentiation?''. Experimental and Clinical Endocrinology & Diabetes, 116(7), 429-436.
dc.identifier.endpage436
dc.identifier.issn0947-7349
dc.identifier.issn1439-3646
dc.identifier.issue7
dc.identifier.pubmed18704836
dc.identifier.scopus2-s2.0-50849119402
dc.identifier.startpage429
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1055/s-2008-1042408
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.thieme-connect.de/products/ejournals/abstract/10.1055/s-2008-1042408
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11452/22923
dc.identifier.volume116
dc.identifier.wos000258769800008
dc.indexed.scopusScopus
dc.indexed.wosSCIE
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherJohann Ambrosius Barth Verlag Medizinverlage Heidelberg
dc.relation.collaborationYurt dışı
dc.relation.collaborationSanayi
dc.relation.journalExperimental and Clinical Endocrinology & Diabetes
dc.relation.publicationcategoryMakale - Uluslararası Hakemli Dergi
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
dc.subjectCattle
dc.subjectPlacenta
dc.subjectSteroidogenic enzymes
dc.subjectSteroid receptors
dc.subjectEstrogen-receptor-alpha
dc.subjectBovine placenta
dc.subjectLate-gestation
dc.subjectCorpus-luteum
dc.subjectFunctional-differentiation
dc.subjectProgesterone production
dc.subjectConjugated estrogens
dc.subjectFetoplacental unit
dc.subjectMolecular-cloning
dc.subjectParturition
dc.subjectEndocrinology & metabolism
dc.subject.emtreeAromatase
dc.subject.emtreeCell nucleus receptor
dc.subject.emtreeCholesterol
dc.subject.emtreeCholesterol monooxygenase (side chain cleaving)
dc.subject.emtreeCholesterol sulfate
dc.subject.emtreeCytochrome p450c17
dc.subject.emtreeEstrogen
dc.subject.emtreeEstrogen receptor
dc.subject.emtreeEstrogen receptor beta
dc.subject.emtreeEstrogen sulfotransferase
dc.subject.emtreeEstrone
dc.subject.emtreeEstrone sulfate
dc.subject.emtreePlacental growth factor
dc.subject.emtreePregnenolone sulfate
dc.subject.emtreeProgesterone
dc.subject.emtreeProgesterone receptor
dc.subject.emtreeSteroid hormone
dc.subject.emtreeSteryl sulfatase
dc.subject.emtreeAutocrine effect
dc.subject.emtreeCattle
dc.subject.emtreeCell differentiation
dc.subject.emtreeCell type
dc.subject.emtreeDown regulation
dc.subject.emtreeEstrogen synthesis
dc.subject.emtreeEpithelium cell
dc.subject.emtreeGiant cell
dc.subject.emtreeHormone release
dc.subject.emtreeNonhuman
dc.subject.emtreePlacenta development
dc.subject.emtreePlacenta function
dc.subject.emtreePriority journal
dc.subject.emtreeProtein expression
dc.subject.emtreeReview
dc.subject.emtreeSteroidogenesis
dc.subject.emtreeTrophoblast
dc.subject.emtreeUpregulation
dc.subject.meshAnimals
dc.subject.meshCattle
dc.subject.meshCell differentiation
dc.subject.meshFemale
dc.subject.meshFetal development
dc.subject.meshGonadal steroid hormones
dc.subject.meshPlacenta
dc.subject.meshTrophoblasts
dc.subject.scopusEstrone; Cows; Holstein-Friesian Cattle
dc.subject.wosEndocrinology & metabolism
dc.titlePlacental steroids in cattle: Hormones, placental growth factors or by-products of trophoblast giant cell differentiation?
dc.typeArticle
dc.wos.quartileQ4
dspace.entity.typePublication
local.contributor.departmentUludağ Üniversites/Veteriner Fakültesi/Kadın Hastalıkları ve Doğum Ana Bilim Dalı
local.indexed.atPubMed
local.indexed.atScopus

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