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Hydrohysteroid Dehydrogenases – Biological Role and Clinical Importance – Review

Authors :
Nina Atanassova
Yvetta A Koeva
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
InTech, 2012.

Abstract

Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (HSDs) belong to the NADPH/NAD+-dependent oxidoreductases, which interconvert ketones and the corresponding secondary alcohols. As their names imply, they catalyze the oxidoreduction in different positions of steroidal substrates (3α-, 3β-, 11β-, 17β-, 20αand 20β-position). The steroid-converting HSDs play central roles in the biosynthesis and inactivation of steroid hormones, but some of them are also involved in the metabolism of diverse non-steroidal compounds [1]. The HSDs are integral parts of systemic (endocrine) and local (intracrine) mechanisms. In target tissues they convert inactive steroid hormones to their corresponding active forms and viceversa, thus modulating the transactivation of steroid hormone receptors or other elements of the non-genomic signal transduction pathways. Therefore, HSDs act as molecular switches allowing pre-receptor modulation of steroid hormone action [2].

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........53ae05943c6e243c66d5271728e75107
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5772/54149