Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.6.1 (sulfatase)
3,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Steroid sulfatase (STS) hydrolyzes inactive estrone sulfate (E1-S) to estrone (E1), while estrogen sulfotransferase (EST; SULT 1E1 or STE gene) sulfonates estrogens to estrogen sulfates. They are considered to play important roles in the regulation of local estrogenic actions in various human tissues, however, their biological significance remains largely unknown. Therefore, we examined the expression of STS and EST in non-pathologic human tissues and breast carcinomas. STS expression was very weak except for the placenta, while EST expression was markedly detected in various tissues examined. In breast carcinoma tissues, STS and EST immunoreactivity was detected in carcinoma cells in 74 and 44% of cases, respectively, and was significantly associated with their mRNA levels and enzymatic activities. STS immunoreactivity was significantly correlated with the tumor size, and an increased risk of recurrence. EST immunoreactivity was inversely correlated with the tumor size or lymph node status. Moreover, EST immunoreactivity was significantly associated with a decreased risk of recurrence or improved prognosis. Our results suggest that EST is involved in protecting various peripheral tissues from excessive estrogenic effects. In the breast carcinoma, STS and EST are suggested to play important roles in the regulation of in situ estrogen production in the breast carcinomas.
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PMID:Steroid sulfatase and estrogen sulfotransferase in normal human tissue and breast carcinoma. 1462 43

We investigated the ability of 37 flavonoids and flavonoid sulfoconjugates, including some abundant dietary constituents, to act as substrates and/or inhibitors of the sulfotransferase and sulfatase enzymes that interconvert active estrogens and inactive estrogen sulfates in human tissues. The enzymes studied include estrogen sulfotransferase, the thermostable phenolsulfotransferase that acts on a range of substrates including estrogens; steroid sulfatase; and two related enzymes, monoamine phenolsulfotransferase and arylsulfatase A. Several dietary flavonoids, including the soy isoflavones genistein and daidzein, were sulfated by these human sulfotransferases. Many flavonoids were potent inhibitors of thermostable phenolsulfotransferase. Genistein and equol were potent mixed inhibitors of hepatic estrogen sulfotransferase, with inhibitory constant values of 500 nM and 400 nM, respectively. Monoamine phenolsulfotransferase activity was relatively unaffected by flavonoids, but this enzyme was mainly responsible for the sulfation of flavonoids at concentrations greater than 1 micro M. Of the compounds tested, only daidzein 4,7-bisulfate, a trace metabolite in humans, significantly inhibited steroid sulfatase in the micromolar concentration range. Hence, dietary flavonoids may be able to influence the bioavailability of endogenous estrogens, and disrupt endocrine balance, by increasing the ratio of active estrogens to inactive estrogen sulfates in human tissues.
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PMID:Phytoestrogens are potent inhibitors of estrogen sulfation: implications for breast cancer risk and treatment. 1507 Sep 45

Although ovaries serve as the primary source of estrogen for pre-menopausal women, after menopause estrogen biosynthesis from circulating precursors occurs in peripheral tissues by the action of several enzymes, 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1 (17beta-HSD1), aromatase and estrogen sulfatase. In the breast, both normal and tumoral tissues have been shown to be capable of synthesizing estrogens, and this local estrogen production can be implicated in the development of breast tumors. In these tissues, estradiol (E(2)) can be synthesized by three pathways: (1) estrone sulfatase transforms estrogen sulfates into bioactive estrogens, (2) 17beta-HSD1 converts estrone (E(1)) into E(2), (3) aromatase which converts androgens into estrogens is also present and contributes to the in situ synthesis of active estrogens but to a far lesser extent than estrone sulfatase. Quantitative assessment of E(2) formation in human breast tumors indicates that metabolism of estrone sulfate (E(1)S) via the sulfatase pathway produces 100-500 times more E(2) than androgen aromatization. Breast tissue also possesses the estrogen sulfotransferase involved in the conversion of estrogens into their sulfates that are biologically inactive. In the present review, we summarized the action of the 19-nor-progestin nomegestrol acetate (NOMAC) on the sulfatase, 17beta-HSD1 and sulfotransferase activities in the hormone-dependent MCF-7 and T47-D human breast cancer cell lines. Using physiological doses of substrates NOMAC blocks very significantly the conversion of E(1)S to E(2). It inhibits the transformation of E(1) to E(2). NOMAC has a stimulatory effect on sulfotransferase activity in both cell lines, with a strong stimulating effect at low doses but only a weak effect at high concentrations. The effects on the three enzymes are always stronger in the progesterone-receptor rich T47-D cell line as compared with the MCF-7 cell line. Besides, no effect is found for NOMAC on the transformation of androstenedione to E(1) in the aromatase-rich choriocarcinoma cell line JEG-3. In conclusion, the inhibitory effect provoked by NOMAC on the enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of E(2) (sulfatase and 17HSD pathways) in estrogen-dependent breast cancer, as well as the stimulatory effect on the formation of the inactive E(1)S, can open attractive perspectives for future clinical trials.
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PMID:Effect of nomegestrol acetate on estrogen biosynthesis and transformation in MCF-7 and T47-D breast cancer cells. 1574 27

Various epidemiological studies have demonstrated a relatively low incidence of cardiovascular events in premenopausal women and its marked increment after menopause. In addition, estrogens have been postulated to exert direct anti-atherogenic effects via binding to estrogen receptors (ERs) in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). However, not all postmenopausal women develop atherosclerosis despite decreased levels of serum estrogen. Therefore, it is considered important to examine the status of estrogen metabolism in situ and of ER expression in the human cardiovascular system. Estrone sulfate (E1S) is a major circulating plasma estrogen that is converted into the biologically active estrogen, estrone (E1) by steroid sulfatase (STS). E1 is also sulfated and reverted into E1S by estrogen sulfotransferase (EST). These two enzymes have recently been shown to play important roles in the in situ estrogen actions of estrogen-dependent human tissues. STS and EST, however, have not been studied in detail in the human vascular system associated with atherosclerotic changes. Therefore, the relative abundance of STS- and EST-immunoreactive protein and mRNA expression in human aorta were evaluated using immunohistochemistry and reverse transcription followed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction in addition to enzyme activity. Furthermore, we evaluated the relative abundance of messenger RNA (mRNA) of both ER subtypes (ERalpha and ERbeta) in the human aorta using reverse transcription followed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR), as well as the immunoreactivity of both ERs in VSMCs of human atherosclerotic lesions. STS expression levels were found to be significantly higher in the VSMCs obtained from female aortas with mild atherosclerotic changes than in those with severe atherosclerotic changes and in male aortas regardless of atherosclerotic changes. EST expression levels in the VSMCs of these aortas, however, were significantly higher in female aortas with severe atherosclerotic changes and in male aortas than in female aortas with mild atherosclerotic changes. In addition, the number of ERalpha and/or ERbeta double positive cells in the neointima was higher in female aortas with a mild degree of atherosclerosis than in female aortas with severe atherosclerosis. They indicate that both abundance of these estrogen-metabolizing enzymes in female aorta and relative levels of ER in VSMCs of female neointima may be associated with the status of atherosclerotic changes.
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PMID:Estrogen actions and in situ synthesis in human vascular smooth muscle cells and their correlation with atherosclerosis. 1586 Feb 69

Intratumoral metabolism and synthesis of estrogens as a result of the interactions of various enzymes are considered to play very important roles in the pathogenesis and development of hormone dependent breast carcinoma. Among these enzymes, intratumoral aromatase plays as important role converting serum androgens to estrogens in situ, and serves as a source of estrogen, especially in postmenopausal patients with breast carcinoma. However, other enzymes such as the 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17beta-HSD) isozymes, estrogen sulfatase (STS) and estrogen sulfotransferase, also play pivotal roles in intratumoral estrogen production. The 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17beta-HSD) isozymes catalyze the interconversion of estradiol (E2) and estrone (E1), and thereby serve to modulate the tissue levels of bioactive E2 in human breast carcinoma. 17Beta-HSD type 1 catalyzes primarily the reduction of estrone (E1) to estradiol (E2), whereas 17beta-HSD type 2 catalyzes primarily the oxidation of E2 to E1. In human breast disease, 17beta-HSD type 1 is expressed in proliferative disease without atypia, atypical ductal hyperplasia, ductal carcinoma in situ and invasive ductal carcinoma. 17Beta-HSD type 2 has not been detected in any of these breast lesions. In addition, 17beta-HSD type 1 coexpression is significantly correlated with estrogen receptor status in invasive ductal carcinoma cases. These results indicate that breast carcinoma can effectively convert E1, produced as a result of in situ aromatization, to E2, a biologically potent estrogen, which exerts estrogenic actions on tumor cells through estrogen receptor, especially the alpha subtype in carcinoma cells. Therefore, inhibiting intratumoral 17beta-HSD type 1 is also considered to contribute to inhibition of cell proliferation by decreasing intratumoral estradiol. Estrogen sulfotransferase (EST; SULT 1E1 or STE gene) sulfonates estrogens to inactive estrogen sulfates, while steroid sulfatase (STS) hydrolyzes estrone sulfate (E1-S) to estrone. EST immunoreactivity was recently demonstrated to be significantly associated with a decreased risk of recurrence or improved prognosis by both uni- and multivariate analyses. STS immunoreactivity was significantly associated with an increased risk of recurrence by univariate analysis. These findings also suggest that EST and STS plays important roles in regulation of in situ estrogen production, and EST especially is a potent prognostic factor in human breast carcinoma. Therefore, the inhibition of intratumoral STS might also serve as an endocrine therapy in postmenopausal patients. It is also important to note that the status of intratumoral aromatase, 17beta-HSD type 1, EST and STS in human breast cancer tissues is variable and not necessarily correlated with each other, which suggests different potential sources of intratumoral estrogens among individual patients with breast cancer. These findings indicate that there are patients who could benefit more from inhibition of these intratumoral enzymes rather than aromatase inhibition as an endocrine therapy. Therefore, it will become very important to examine the intratumoral levels of 17beta-HSD type 1 and STS in the resected specimens of human breast carcinoma as potential targets of novel endocrine therapy in the near future.
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PMID:New development in intracrinology of breast carcinoma. 1675 6

Changes in the disposition of estradiol 17beta-d-glucuronide (E(2)17G), a substrate of the organic anion-transporting polypeptide family (Oatp) and multidrug resistance-associated protein 2 (Mrp2), were examined in livers of male Wag/Rij rats that were injected with CC531 cells intraportally to induce metastatic tumors (n = 5) or with phosphate-buffered saline for sham-operated controls (n = 4). Multiple indicator dilution, single-pass liver perfusions revealed extremely high influx clearances of [(3)H]E(2)17G (>190 ml/min) in both groups. In recirculating liver perfusions, [(3)H]E(2)17G decayed monoexponentially in the reservoir perfusate, and the total (9.19 +/- 1.33 versus 8.18 +/- 0.94 ml/min) and biliary (4.94 +/- 1.07 versus 4.60 +/- 0.86 ml/min) clearances were similar in both groups (P > 0.05). The metabolic clearance of E(2)17G was higher in the tumor group (4.60 +/- 0.64 versus 3.23 +/- 0.23 ml/min, P < 0.05). E(2)3S17G, the 3-sulfate metabolite, whose identity was confirmed by mass spectrometry, appeared only in bile and not perfusate. Liver microsomal incubations of E(2)3(35)S17G and [(3)H]estrone sulfate revealed similar sulfatase activities between the tumor and sham livers, albeit the activities were much lower for E(2)3(35)S17G. Oatp1a1 and Oatp1b2 protein expression in liver membrane fragments was reduced by 42% and 38%, respectively, whereas that of cytosolic estrogen sulfotransferase (Sult1e1) was significantly increased (41%) with tumor (P < 0.05). All of the observations were captured by modeling. From modeling, we showed that reduction of the high influx clearance (546 to 283 ml/min) failed to lower the total clearance of E(2)17G, whereas up-regulation of Sult1e1 increased the E(2)17G sulfation clearance (2.56 to 3.69 ml/min) in livers with metastatic tumors.
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PMID:Increased estrogen sulfation of estradiol 17beta-D-glucuronide in metastatic tumor rat livers. 1689 76

Intratumoral metabolism and synthesis of biologically active steroids such as estradiol and 5alpha-dihydrotestosterone as a result of interactions of various enzymes are considered to play very important roles in the pathogenesis and development of hormone-dependent breast carcinoma. Among these enzymes involved in estrogen metabolism, intratumoral aromatase play an important role in converting androgens to estrogens in situ from serum and serving as the source of estrogens, especially in postmenopausal patients with breast carcinoma. However, other enzymes such as 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17beta-HSD) isozymes, estrogen sulfatase (STS), and estrogen sulfotransferase, which contribute to in situ availability of biologically active estrogens, also play pivotal roles in this intratumoral estrogen production above. Androgen action on human breast carcinoma has not been well-studied but are considered important not only in hormonal regulation but also other biological features of carcinoma cells. Intracrine mechanisms also play important roles in androgen actions on human breast carcinoma cells. Among the enzymes involved in biologically active androgen metabolism and/or synthesis, both 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 5 (17betaHSD5; conversion from circulating androstenedione to testosterone) and 5alpha-reductase (5alphaRed; reduction of testosterone to DHT (5alpha-dihydrotestosterone) were expressed in breast carcinoma tissues, and in situ production of DHT has been proposed in human breast cancer tissues. However, intracrine mechanisms of androgens as well as their biological or clinical significance in the patients with breast cancer have not been fully elucidated in contrast to those in estrogens.
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PMID:Intracrinology of estrogens and androgens in breast carcinoma. 1793 21

Melatonin exerts oncostatic effects on different kinds of neoplasias, especially on estrogen-dependent mammary tumors. Current knowledge about the mechanisms by which melatonin inhibits the growth of breast cancer cells point to an interaction of melatonin with estrogen-responsive pathways. The intratumoral production of estrogens in breast carcinoma tissue plays a pivotal role in the proliferation of mammary tumoral cells and its blockade is one of the main objectives of the treatment of breast cancer. The aim of the present work is centered on the study of the role of melatonin in the control of some enzymes involved in the formation and transformation of estrogens in human breast cancer cells. The present study demonstrates that melatonin, at physiologic concentrations, modulates the synthesis and transformation of biologically active estrogens in MCF-7 cells, through the inhibition of sulfatase (STS) and 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (17beta-HSD1) activity and expression, enzymes involved in the estradiol formation in breast cancer cells. Physiologic concentrations of melatonin also stimulate the activity and expression of estrogen sulfotransferase (EST), the enzyme responsible for the formation of the biologically inactive estrogen sulfates. The level of EST mRNA steady-state of cells treated with melatonin was three times higher than that in control cells. These findings which document that melatonin has an inhibitory effect on STS and 17beta-HSD1 and a stimulatory effect on EST, in combination with its previously described antiaromatase effect, can open up new and interesting possibilities in clinical applications of melatonin in breast cancer.
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PMID:Selective estrogen enzyme modulator actions of melatonin in human breast cancer cells. 1829 68

The aim of the present investigation was to study whether the endocrinological status of women bearing polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS) affects the endometrial in situ steroid metabolism. For this purpose, we evaluated the mRNA levels (RT-PCR), and the activity of steroid metabolic enzymes: P450 aromatase, steroid sulfatase (STS), estrogen sulfotransferase (EST) and 17beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17beta-HSD) in 23 samples of normal endometria (CE), 18 PCOS endometria without treatment (PCOSE), 10 specimens from PCOS women with endometrial hyperplasia (HPCOSE), and 7 endometria from patients with endometrial hyperplasia not associated to PCOS (EH). The data showed lower levels of STS mRNA for PCOSE and HPCOSE (p<0.05, p<0.01, respectively) and of EST for HPCOSE and EH compared to control (p<0.05). However, higher levels for EST mRNA were obtained in PCOSE (p<0.05) versus CE. The mRNA and protein levels for P450 aromatase were undetectable in all analyzed endometria. The relationship between the activities of STS and EST was lower in PCOSE and HPCOSE (p<0.05) versus CE. The ratio between the mRNA from 17beta-HSD type 1/type 2 was higher in PCOSE (p<0.05), whereas, a diminution in the 17beta-HSD type 2 activity was observed in PCOSE (p<0.05). These results indicate that the activity of enzymes related to the steroid metabolism in analyzed PCOSE differ from those found in the CE. Consequently, PCOSE may present an in situ deregulation of the steroid metabolism.
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PMID:In situ estrogen metabolism in proliferative endometria from untreated women with polycystic ovarian syndrome with and without endometrial hyperplasia. 1846 89

We conducted this study to elucidate a factor causing a poor sign of parturition and prolonged gestation, which is frequently observed in cows carrying somatic clone fetuses. Pre-partum rises in concentrations of plasma estrone and estradiol-17beta in the recipient cows pregnant with clones were subtle. By contrast, the plasma concentration of estrone sulfate in clone pregnancies increased gradually from pre-initiation of parturition induction whereas control cows that received in vivo-derived embryos showed a significant increase at parturition. Therefore, in clone pregnancies, the ratio of estrone/estrone sulfate was low during the pre-partum period compared with control. Messenger RNA expression of estrogen sulfotransferase (SULT1E1) in the placenta at parturition was significantly higher in clone pregnancies than control pregnancies and was localized in binucleate cells (BNC). SULT1E1 mRNA abundance was negatively and positively correlated with concentrations of maternal estrone and estrone sulfate at parturition respectively. Messenger RNA expressions of estrogen sulfatase (STS) and aromatase (CYP19) were similar between clone and control pregnancies and were localized in BNC and caruncular epithelial cells. STS and CYP19 mRNA abundances showed positive correlations with maternal estradiol-17beta concentration. The population of BNC in the placenta did not differ between clone and control pregnancies. Plasma cortisol concentration of vaginally delivered newborn clone calves was comparable with those of control, although cesarean section delivered clone calves showed a low concentration. These results suggest that excess estrogen sulfoconjugation is the reason for the perturbed low ratio of active to inactive estrogens and the resulting hormonal imbalance contributes to the lack of overt signs of readiness for parturition in cows pregnant with clones.
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PMID:Excess estrogen sulfoconjugation as the possible cause for a poor sign of parturition in pregnant cows carrying somatic cell clone fetuses. 1866 16


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