1. An alternative explanation of hypertension associated with 17α-hydroxylase deficiency syndrome
David J Morris, Syed A Latif, Andrew S Brem Steroids. 2014 Jan;79:44-8. doi: 10.1016/j.steroids.2013.10.006. Epub 2013 Oct 28.
The syndrome of 17α-hydroxylase deficiency is due to the inability to synthesize cortisol and is associated with enhanced secretion of both corticosterone and 11-deoxy-corticosterone (DOC). In humans, corticosterone and its 5α-Ring A-reduced metabolites are excreted via the bile into the intestine and transformed by anaerobic bacteria to 21-dehydroxylated products: 11β-OH-progesterone or 11β-OH-(allo)-5α-preganolones (potent inhibitors of 11β-HSD2 and 11β-HSD1 dehydrogenase). Neomycin blocks the formation of these steroid metabolites and can blunt the hypertension in rats induced by either ACTH or corticosterone. 3α,5α-Tetrahydro-corticosterone, 11β-hydroxy-progesterone, and 3α,5α-tetrahydro-11β-hydroxy-progesterone strongly inhibit 11β-HSD2 and 11β-HSD1 dehydrogenase activity; all these compounds are hypertensinogenic when infused in adrenally intact rats. Urine obtained from a patient with 17α-hydroxylase deficiency demonstrated markedly elevated levels of endogenous glycyrrhetinic acid-like factors (GALFs) that inhibit 11β-HSD2 and 11β-HSD1 dehydrogenase activity (>300 times greater, and >400 times greater, respectively, than those in normotensive controls). Thus, in addition to DOC, corticosterone and its 5α-pathway products as well as the 11-oxygenated progesterone derivatives may play a previously unrecognized role in the increased Na(+) retention and BP associated with patients with 17α-hydroxylase deficiency.
2. Positive GABAA receptor modulating steroids and their antagonists: Implications for clinical treatments
Torbjörn Bäckström, Roshni Das, Marie Bixo J Neuroendocrinol. 2022 Feb;34(2):e13013. doi: 10.1111/jne.13013. Epub 2021 Aug 1.
GABA is the main inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain and GABAergic transmission has been shown to be of importance for regulation of mood, memory and food intake. The progesterone metabolite allopregnanolone (Allo) is a positive GABAA receptor modulating steroid with potent effects. In humans, disorders such as premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), hepatic encephalopathy and polycystic ovarian syndrome are associated with elevated Allo levels and increased negative mood, disturbed memory and increased food intake in some individuals. This is surprising because Allo shares many properties with benzodiazepines and is mainly considered to be anxiolytic and anti-depressant. However, it is well established that, in certain individuals, GABAA receptor activating compounds could have paradoxical effects and thus be anxiogenic in low physiological plasma concentrations but anxiolytic at high levels. We have demonstrated that isoallopregnanolone (Isoallo), the 3β-OH sibling of Allo, functions as a GABAA receptor modulating steroid antagonist (GAMSA) but without any effects of its own on GABAA receptors. The antagonistic effect is noted in most GABAA subtypes investigated in vitro to date. In vivo, Isoallo can inhibit Allo-induced anaesthesia in rats, as well as sedation or saccadic eye velocity in humans. Isoallo treatment has been studied in women with PMDD. In a first phase II study, Isoallo (Sepranolone; Asarina Pharma) injections significantly ameliorated negative mood in women with PMDD compared with placebo. Several GAMSAs for oral administration have also been developed. The GAMSA, UC1011, can inhibit Allo induced memory disturbances in rats and an oral GAMSA, GR3027, has been shown to restore learning and motor coordination in rats with hepatic encephalopathy. In humans, vigilance, cognition and pathological electroencephalogram were improved in patients with hepatic encephalopathy on treatment with GR3027. In conclusion GAMSAs are a new possible treatment for disorders and symptoms caused by hyperactivity in the GABAA system.
3. Why do humans have two glucocorticoids: A question of intestinal fortitude
David J Morris Steroids. 2015 Oct;102:32-8. doi: 10.1016/j.steroids.2015.06.017. Epub 2015 Jul 2.
The main purpose of this review article is threefold (a) to try to address the question "why are two adrenal glucocorticoids, cortisol and corticosterone, secreted by humans and other mammalian species?", (b) to outline a hypothesis that under certain physiological conditions, corticosterone has additional biochemical functions over and above those of cortisol, and (c) to emphasize the role of gastrointestinal bacteria in chemically transforming corticosterone into metabolites and that these re-cycled metabolites can be reabsorbed from the enterohepatic circuit. Cortisol and its metabolites are not secreted into the bile and thus are excluded from the enterohepatic circuit. Corticosterone was the first steroid hormone isolated from adrenal gland extracts. Many believe that corticosterone functions identically to cortisol. Yet, corticosterone causes significant sodium retention and potassium secretion in Addisonian patients, unlike cortisol. In humans, corticosterone and its metabolite, 3α,5α-TH-corticosterone, are excreted via the bile in humans where they are transformed in the intestine by anaerobic bacteria into 21-dehydroxylated products: 11β-OH-progesterone or 11β-OH-(allo)-5α-preganolones. These metabolites inhibit 11β-HSD2 and 11β-HSD1 dehydrogenase, being many-fold more potent than 3α,5α-TH-cortisol. Corticosterone has significantly lower Km's for both 11β-HSD2 and 11β-HSD1 enzymatic dehydrogenase activity, compared to cortisol. Patients diagnosed with 17α-hydroxylase deficiency have elevated blood pressure and high levels of circulating corticosterone, 3α,5α-TH-corticosterone, and their 21-dehydroxlated corticosterone derivatives. In humans, these 5α-corticosterone metabolites are likely to influence blood pressure regulation and Na(+) retention by inhibiting the rate of deactivation of cortisol by 11β-HSD isoforms.