Estrogen in the adult male reproductive tract: A review

被引:353
作者
Rex A Hess
机构
[1] Dept. of Vet. Biosci. Repro. Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana
关键词
Estrogen; Germ Cell; Sertoli Cell; Leydig Cell; Male Reproductive System;
D O I
10.1186/1477-7827-1-52
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Testosterone and estrogen are no longer considered male only and female only hormones. Both hormones are important in both sexes. It was known as early as the 1930's that developmental exposure to a high dose of estrogen causes malformation of the male reproductive tract, but the early formative years of reproductive biology as a discipline did not recognize the importance of estrogen in regulating the normal function of the adult male reproductive tract. In the adult testis, estrogen is synthesized by Leydig cells and the germ cells, producing a relatively high concentration in rete testis fluid. Estrogen receptors are present in the testis, efferent ductules and epididymis of most species. However, estrogen receptor-α is reported absent in the testis of a few species, including man. Estrogen receptors are abundant in the efferent ductule epithelium, where their primary function is to regulate the expression of proteins involved in fluid reabsorption. Disruption of the α-receptor, either in the knockout (αERKO) or by treatment with a pure antiestrogen, results in dilution of cauda epididymal sperm, disruption of sperm morphology, inhibition of sodium transport and subsequent water reabsorption, increased secretion of Cl-, and eventual decreased fertility. In addition to this primary regulation of luminal fluid and ion transport, estrogen is also responsible for maintaining a differentiated epithelial morphology. Thus, we conclude that estrogen or its α-receptor is an absolute necessity for fertility in the male. © 2003 Hess; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 163 条
[1]  
Wolff E., Ginglinger A., Sur la transformation des Poulets males en intersexues par injection d'hormone femelle (folliculine) aux embryons, Archs. Anat. Histol. Embryol., 20, pp. 219-278, (1935)
[2]  
Weniger J.P., Aromatase activity in fetal gonads of mammals, J. Dev. Physiol., 14, pp. 303-306, (1990)
[3]  
Burrows H., Pathological conditions induced by oestrogenic compounds in the coagulating gland and prostate of the mouse, Am. J. Cancer, 23, pp. 490-512, (1935)
[4]  
Greene R.R., Burrill M.W., Ivy A.C., Experimental intersexuality, Am. J. Anat., 67, pp. 305-345, (1940)
[5]  
Arai Y., Mori T., Suzuki Y., Bern H., Long-term effects of perinatal exposure to sex steroids and diethylstilbestrol on the reproductive system of male mammals, Int. Rev. Cytol., 84, pp. 235-265, (1983)
[6]  
McLachlan J.A., Transplacental effects of diethylstilbestrol in mice, Natl. Cancer Inst. Monogr., pp. 67-72, (1979)
[7]  
Greco T.L., Duello T.M., Gorski J., Estrogen receptors, estradiol, and diethylstilbestrol in early development: The mouse as a model for the study of estrogen receptors and estrogen sensitivity in embryonic development of male and female reproductive tracts, Endocr. Rev., 14, pp. 59-71, (1993)
[8]  
Baggett B., Engel L.L., Balderas L., Lanman G., Savard K., Dorfman R.I., Conversion of C14-androgens to C14-estrogenic steroids by endocrine tissues, Endocrinology, 64, pp. 600-608, (1959)
[9]  
Bedrak E., Samuels L.T., Steroid biosynthesis by the equine testis, Endocrinology, 85, pp. 1186-1195, (1969)
[10]  
Staffieri J.J., Badano H., Celoria G., Study of testicular estrogenic production in normal individuals and in patients with various alterations of the seminiferous tube, Rev. Iber. Endocrinol., 12, pp. 85-93, (1965)