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1.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol ; 44(3): 263-72, 1993 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8461258

ABSTRACT

We describe here an in vitro technique to assess the estrogenic activity of chemicals. This technique is based on rainbow trout hepatocytes incubated in a basic medium free of any additional growth factors or estrogenic chemicals and uses the production of vitellogenin (VTG) as a marker for the estrogenic potency of the compounds tested. The system allows at least some of the metabolic transformations which are undertaken by the liver cells in vivo and could therefore be used for xenobiotic compounds which exhibit estrogenic activities after liver metabolic transformation. A dose-response curve was always consistently obtained using estradiol-17 beta (E2), with a mid point at around 100 nM E2 and a maximum response at around 1000 nM. Established estrogens such as 17 a 1 ethynylestradiol (EE2) or diethylstilboestrol (DES) were also tested. EE2 appeared to be equipotent with E2 and DES slightly less potent. E2 conjugates were, perhaps surprisingly, also very potent. Estradiol-3-sulfate was equipotent with E2 and estradiol-17 beta-glucuronide approx. 10% as potent. Other steroids such as androgens and progesterone, though active in the bioassay, were 3 orders of magnitude less potent than E2. Of the various steroids tested, only cortisol, at concentrations up to 50 microM, was completely inactive. Six different phytoestrogens were tested in the assay. All were weakly estrogenic, possessing approximately one thousandth the potency of E2 (they were as potent as the androgens and progesterone). All six phytoestrogens, as well as the androgens and progesterone, were tested in the presence of tamoxifen. In all cases tamoxifen reduced the production of VTG significantly, demonstrating that the estrogenic action of all of these compounds was most likely mediated by the E2 receptor. The potencies determined here may not reflect the situation in vivo but can provide complementary results about the activity of chemicals which need an hepatic metabolization to be estrogenic. Hepatocyte cultures would profitably be developed in other species to sustain these results.


Subject(s)
Estrogens, Non-Steroidal , Estrogens/pharmacology , Isoflavones , Liver/metabolism , Trout/metabolism , Vitellogenins/biosynthesis , Animals , Biological Assay/methods , Cells, Cultured , Diethylstilbestrol/pharmacology , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Estradiol/administration & dosage , Estradiol/analogs & derivatives , Estradiol/pharmacology , Estrogens/administration & dosage , Ethinyl Estradiol/pharmacology , Liver/drug effects , Phytoestrogens , Plant Preparations , Progesterone/pharmacology , Tamoxifen/pharmacology , Testosterone/pharmacology
2.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol ; 38(3): 293-9, 1991 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2009221

ABSTRACT

Various phytoestrogens such as formononetin, daidzein, genistein and equol were synthesized. Their purity was assessed by various analytical techniques including melting point determination, thin-layer chromatography (TLC), infra-red spectra (i.r. spectra), nuclear magnetic resonance (1H- and 13C-NMR) and gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC-MS). The estrogenic activity of these compounds, as well as biochanin A and coumestrol, was biologically tested by the induction of vitellogenin secretion in yearling sturgeon and compared to the activity of estradiol-17 beta. Pure daidzein, biochanin A, genistein, equol and coumestrol all had estrogenic activity as assessed by their induction of hepatic synthesis of vitellogenin when administrated intraperitoneally to yearling Siberian sturgeon. Coumestrol seemed to be the most potent compound, inducing the most vitellogenin secretion with the lowest dose administered. Formononetin was inactive when administered by the intraperitoneal route. All the phytoestrogens tested were considerably less potent than estradiol-17 beta.


Subject(s)
Estrogens, Non-Steroidal , Estrogens/chemistry , Estrogens/metabolism , Animals , Chromans/chemistry , Chromatography, Thin Layer , Coumestrol/chemistry , Equol , Fishes , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Genistein , Isoflavones/chemistry , Liver/metabolism , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Phytoestrogens , Plant Preparations , Spectrophotometry, Infrared , Vitellogenins/analysis , Vitellogenins/biosynthesis
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