Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.1.1.3 (HSD)
3,464 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Whereas aldosterone is normally a much stronger mineralocorticoid than cortisol in vivo, mineralocorticoid receptors have identical in vitro affinities for these hormones. The in vivo specificity of the receptors is, at least in part, the result of activity of 11-HSD, an enzyme located in most mineralocorticoid target tissues that converts cortisol to cortisone. Cortisone is not a ligand for the receptor, whereas aldosterone is not a substrate of the enzyme. The syndrome of AME is a rare form of juvenile hypertension in which 11-HSD is defective. This deficiency allows mineralocorticoid receptors to be occupied by cortisol, leading to hypertension, because plasma concentrations of cortisol are much higher than those of aldosterone. Licorice, which contains 11-HSD inhibitors, causes a similar syndrome. There are two known isozymes of 11-HSD. The liver or type I isozyme is expressed at high levels in the liver, has a relatively low affinity for steroids (micromolar Km), catalyzes both dehydrogenation and the reverse reductase reaction, and utilizes NADP+ or NADPH as cofactors. The kidney or type 2 isozyme is expressed at high levels in the kidney and placenta, has a high affinity (nanomolar Km) for steroids, catalyzes only dehydrogenation, and utilizes NAD+ as a cofactor. Mutations in the HSD11B2 (HSD11K) gene encoding the kidney isozyme of 11-HSD have been detected in all kindreds with AME studied thus far. This gene represents a candidate locus for the common, "essential" form of hypertension.
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PMID:11 beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase and the syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess. 903 89

11 beta-HSD catalyses the interconversion of active and inactive corticosteroids and exists as two isoforms with less than 30% amino acid homology. The bi-directional NADP-dependent type 1 enzyme appears to function as a tissue-specific glucocorticoid provider. The uni-directional NAD-dependent type 2 enzyme functions as a tissue-specific glucocorticoid protector. The syndrome of AME is caused by mutations in the gene of 11 beta-HSD2. Placental 11 beta-HSD2 is a barrier to growth-retarding maternal glucocorticoids and may play a key role in prenatal programming of hypertension.
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PMID:11 beta-Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases: tissue-specific dictators of glucocorticoid action. 907 55

AME has been a crucial experiment of biology from which much has been learnt about corticosteroid hormone action and mineralocorticoid hypertension. 11 beta-HSD is an important pre-receptor pathway determining corticosteroid hormone action. Any tissue expressing 11 beta-HSD1 or 11 beta-HSD2 can clearly modulate glucocorticoid and mineralocorticoid action independent of circulating concentrations. A series of related enzymes operates in a similar fashion to determine hormone action for other members of the thyroid/steroid hormone receptor superfamily (e.g. 17 beta-HSD, 25-hydroxyvitamin D 1 alpha-hydroxylase, aromatase, 5'-deiodinase, 5 alpha-reductase). Endocrinologists have been obsessed with measuring the concentrations of a hormone in the circulation and making their decisions on the basis of these results, whether or not that hormone is involved in the pathogenesis of a disease process. Such an approach needs to be revised, with greater emphasis on considering the action of a hormone within a given tissue and, in turn, on the role of these enzymes in the pathogenesis of human disease.
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PMID:Cortisol, hypertension and obesity: the role of 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase. 959 34