Immunology,
Endocrine & Metabolic Agents in Medicinal Chemistry
(Formerly 'Current Medicinal Chemistry - Immunology, Endocrine
and Metabolic Agents')
ISSN: 1871-5222

Immunology, Endocrine &
Metabolic Agents in Medicinal Chemistry
Volume 6, Number 3, June 2006
Contents
The Extranuclear Life of the Nuclear Receptor
Hormone Family: New Therapeutic Possibilities
Guest Editor: Sandra Incerpi
Editorial Pp.
233-234
L-Thyroxine Acts as a Hormone as well as a Prohormone
at the Cell Membrane Pp. 235-240
P.J. Davis, F.B. Davis and H.-Y. Lin
[Abstract]
Nongenomic Actions of Thyroid Hormones: Focus on Membrane
Transport Systems Pp. 241-254
R.N. Farias, A.M. Fiore, J.Z. Pedersen and S.
Incerpi
[Abstract]
3, 5-Diiodothyronine: Biological Actions and Therapeutic Perspectives
Pp. 255-265
A. Lombardi, A. Lanni, E. Silvestri, P. de Lange,
F. Goglia and M. Moreno
[Abstract]
Estrogens and Thyroid Hormones: Non-Genomic Effects
are Coupled to Transcription Pp. 267-280
X. Zhao, D.W. Pfaff and N. Vasudevan
[Abstract]
Estrogen Receptor-α:
Plasma Membrane Localization and Functions Pp. 281-289
M. Marino and P. Ascenzi
[Abstract]
Doing the Puzzle of Steroid Hormone Action: Biological
Functions, Physiological and Clinical Significance of Plasma
Membrane Residing Glucocorticoid Recognizing Proteins Pp.
291-303
S. Daufeldt and A. Allera
[Abstract]
Free Radical Attack on Cholesterol: Oxysterols as Markers
of Oxidative Stress and as Bioactive Molecules Pp.
305-316
F. Micheletta and L. Iuliano
[Abstract]
Abstracts

[Back to top]
Editorial
This Theme Issue is dedicated to the emerging field of nongenomic
or extranuclear effects of the nuclear receptor hormone family.
It is nowadays recognized that most hormones working through
nuclear receptors have a wider pleiotropic action than the
one elicited by the interaction within the nucleus. For these
hormones also extranuclear effects have been reported, with
a rapid time course that cannot be explained by a genomic
mechanism.
Much of the pioneering work was done by of Paul J. Davis and
his group, and it is appropriate that their contribution on
the state of the art of nongenomic effects of thyroid hormones
open this issue. They have recently identified the long-searched
plasma membrane receptor for thyroxine as the α
V β 3
integrin; the hormone binds at the Arg-Gly-Asp recognition
site as shown by the capability of RGD peptides to inhibit
thyroid hormone action at the cell surface. This finding explains
several, if not all, of the extranuclear effects of this class
of hormones, and opens a new scenario for the years to come.
Membrane transport systems account for the largest group of
nongenomic effects of thyroid hormones and the review by Farias
et al. covers this topic with a wide survey of this
important field. Thyroid hormones cause weight reduction by
metabolic rate and cholesterol reduction through enhanced
expression of LDL receptors and cholesterol metabolism, but
the administration of thyroid hormones also gives rise to
side effects that may induce thyreotoxicosis with particularly
important effects on the cardiovascular system (tachycardia
and atrial fibrillation). Pharmacological research has been
aimed at the development of thyroid hormone analogs to be
used in case of obesity that produce the positive effects
on lipid metabolism without the deleterious effects on the
heart. The contribution by Goglia’s group focuses on
the effects of diiodothyronines on mitochondria, and on the
novel finding that 3,5-diiodothyronine appears to be devoid
of the side effects causing thyreotoxicosis. The last contribution
on thyroid hormones comes from Zhao et al. and deals
with the complicated interaction between estrogens and thyroid
hormones, that appears to be particularly relevant for neuroendocrine
feedback and reproductive behavior. In analogy to estrogens,
thyroid hormones exhibit a large range of actions, in particular
they are critical for growth, development and differentiation.
Neonatal hypothyroidism results in cretinism, a disorder characterized
by mental retardation and skeletal defects. Hormone therapy
during pregnancy or to the child immediately after birth,
may reverse a situation that otherwise will become irreversible,
resulting in a more or less serious cognitive deficiency.
A plasma membrane receptor for estrogens has not been identified
yet and contradictory results are reported in the literature,
suggesting either that the membrane receptor is identical
or very similar to a nuclear receptor (ERα
or ERβ)
or that it is a totally different protein. Nongenomic effects
of estrogens have been found in many different tissues, and
the paper by Zhao et al. reports on these controversial
findings. It is possible that many actions of estrogens at
the membrane of the neuroendocrine system are mediated through
modulation of nongenomic responses such as the effects on
voltage-operated calcium channels and intracellular calcium
stores. Another contribution on estrogens, and a step forward
in the understanding of both the mechanisms and roles of their
extranuclear effects, is given by Marino and Ascenzi. They
recently showed that ERα
can undergo S-palmitoylation, a modification that
represents a major determinant for ERα
at the plasma membrane and is important for the modulation
of nongenomic effects of estrogens. Palmitoylation enables
the plasma membrane exposure of ERα
and promotes downstream signaling for estradiol-mediated proliferation
and survival of cancer cells, offering a new target for anti-tumor
therapy.
Glucocorticoid receptors have been studied for many years
and the multi-billion-dollar market for this class of compounds
is growing rapidly as side effect profiles are reduced and
newly developed molecules travels from the laboratories to
the pill boxes. The contribution from Daufeldt and Allera
deals with the physiological and clinical significance of
the interaction of natural and synthetic glucocorticoids with
plasma-membrane-residing glucocorticoid receptors. Glucocorticoids
have powerful anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects
as well as apoptotic competence in many lymphoid malignancies,
and various glucocorticoids have been essential therapeutic
tools for the past 50 years despite the significant risks
associated with their long-term application, e.g.
rapid bone loss, clinical osteoporosis, joint necrosis, metabolic
effects or Cushing syndrome. Antidepressants modulate glucorticoid
receptor function in vitro by inhibiting plasma membrane
steroid transporters, and it is likely that antidepressants
in vivo act through interaction with the plasma membrane
receptors localized in the blood-brain barrier and in neurons.
To finish we throw a stone into the pond with the contribution
by Micheletta and Iuliano on the emerging role of oxysterols,
metabolites of cholesterol present in nanomolar concentrations
in biological fluids and important intermediates in a number
of biochemical pathways including bile acid synthesis, reverse
cholesterol transport, oxidative stress, and the control of
cholesterol synthesis in the brain. The authors underline
the difficulties in the determination of oxidative stress
in vivo, and point to mass spectrometry methods for
the measurement of specific markers of lipid peroxidation
in biological fluids. Recently a role for ozone in the development
of human disease has been proposed in connection with the
discovery of a new property of the antibodies suggesting a
previously unexplored function of the immune system. Cholesterol
products of the ozonolysis reaction, 5,6-secosterol and its
metabolites, are found in atherosclerotic tissue. Recent data
suggest a role for oxysterols as markers of oxidative stress,
but also bioactive molecules: are we facing a new family of
Janus molecules?
At the end of the story it has been a great pleasure for me
to work with new colleagues and present collaborators to put
together this issue dedicated to the future targets of drugs
acting through nongenomic effects. I do hope that past, present
and future colleagues will enjoy reading this issue as much
as I enjoyed working on it.
Sandra Incerpi
Department of Biology
University of Rome “Roma Tre”
Viale Marconi 446
00146 Roma
Italy
Tel: +39-06-55176335
Fax: +39-06-55176321
E-mail: incerpi@uniroma3.it
[Back to top]
L-Thyroxine Acts as a Hormone as well as a Prohormone
at the Cell Membrane
P.J. Davis, F.B. Davis and H.-Y. Lin
The higher affinity of the nuclear thyroid hormone receptor
TR for 3,5,3’-triiodo-L-thyronine (T3)
relative to L-thyroxine (T4),
the well-characterized genomic actions of T3
and the existence of cellular deiodinases that convert T4
to T3
support the concept that T4
is a prohormone for T3.
In the past decade, however, a number of actions of thyroid
hormones, initiated at the plasma membrane and involving the
cytoskeleton or specific events in the cell nucleus, have
been described that are primary responses to T4.
Two prototypes of such nongenomic actions are 1) actin polymerization
and its consequences in terms of neuritogenesis and interactions
of astrocytes with extracellular matrix proteins and 2) stimulation
of the mitogen-activated protein kinase signal transduction
pathway with subsequent serine phosphorylation of trans-activator
nucleoproteins, including TR, p53 and STAT1α.
These actions of T4
appear to be independent of entry of thyroid hormone into
the cell. From the cell surface, T4-dictated
serine phosphorylation of transactivators such as TRβ1
modulate the transcriptional activity of these proteins. This
is a postulated cooperative interface between nongenomic and
genomic effects of thyroid hormone, prompted by action of
T4
at the plasma membrane. Biological endpoints of such actions
of T4
in model systems are angiogenesis and increased growth of
certain tumor cells. The membrane receptor for activation
by T4
of mitogen-activated protein kinase is on an integrin, αVβ3.
From its cell surface receptor, T4
can also influence intracellular protein trafficking and modulate
activities of plasma membrane ion pumps or channels. Thus,
T4
has plasma membrane-initiated actions as a hormone, as well
as its function as a source of the more metabolically important
iodothyronine analogue, T3.
[Back to top]
Nongenomic Actions of Thyroid Hormones: Focus on Membrane
Transport Systems
R.N. Farias, A.M. Fiore, J.Z. Pedersen and S.
Incerpi
Extranuclear or nongenomic effects of thyroid hormones are
unaffected by inhibitors of protein synthesis, and their rapid
time course cannot be explained by interaction of the hormone
molecule with nuclear receptors. Their origin has been localized
at the plasma membrane, but also at organelles such as the
endoplasmatic reticulum and mitochondria. Thyroid hormone
has been reported to activate, by both genomic and non genomic
mechanisms, the Ca2+-ATPase that stores calcium
from the cytosol in the sarcoplasmic reticulum; the decrease
in intracellular Ca2+ leads to muscle relaxation.
Considering the important effects on the cardiovascular system,
T3
can actually be envisaged as a potent inotropic drug. T3
is also a major regulator of the plasma membrane Na+/K+-ATPase
activity; T3
and its analog 3,5-diiodothyronine rapidly inhibits Na+/K+-ATPase
in chick embryo hepatocytes, whereas the activity is up-regulated
in alveolar epithelial cells. Also the ubiquitous plasma membrane
Na+/H+ exchanger, that regulates cell
volume and pH by exchanging extracellular Na+ with
cytoplasmic H+ according to the concentration gradient,
is activated by T3
via both genomic and nongenomic mechanisms.
A growing number of natural and synthetic thyroid hormone
analogs are available to study the physiological importance
of extranuclear effects; this may lead to compounds that selectively
target either genomic or nongenomic receptors. Such drugs
may make it possible to activate separately only a part of
the complex effects normally induced by thyroid hormones,
this could be of clinical relevance for the cardiovascular
system, bone tissue and the Central Nervous System.
[Back to top]
3, 5-Diiodothyronine: Biological Actions and Therapeutic
Perspectives
A. Lombardi, A. Lanni, E. Silvestri, P. de Lange,
F. Goglia and M. Moreno
The purpose of this review is to summarize the current state
of knowledge concerning the biological activities of 3, 5-diiodothyronine
(T2)
and its potential use as a pharmacological agent. Until recent
years, T2
was considered an inactive metabolite of thyroid hormones
thyroxine (T4)
and triiodo-L-thyronine (T3).
Several observations, however, led to a reconsideration of
this idea. Early studies dealing with the biological activities
of this iodothyronine revealed its ability to stimulate cellular/mitochondrial
respiration, essentially by a nuclear-independent pathway.
Mitochondria and the energy-transduction apparatus seem to
be major targets of T2,
although outside the mitochondria T2
also has effects on carriers, ion-exchangers and enzymes.
Recent studies suggest that T2
may also affect the transcription of some genes, but again
the underlying mechanisms seem to differ from those actuated
by T3.
The accumulated evidence permits the conclusion that the actions
of T2
do not simply mimic those of T3
but instead are specific actions exerted through mechanisms
that are independent of those actuated by T3
and do not involve thyroid hormone receptors. In addition,
very recent evidence leads us to suggest that T2
may be a potentially useful agent for the treatment of diet-dependent
overweight (and the consequent hypertriglyceridemia and high
cholesterol level) without inducing thyrotoxicosis.
[Back to top]
Estrogens and Thyroid Hormones: Non-Genomic Effects
are Coupled to Transcription
X. Zhao, D.W. Pfaff and N. Vasudevan
Estrogens and thyroid hormones are regulators of important
diverse physiological processes such as reproduction, thermogenesis,
neural development, neural differentiation and cardiovascular
functions. Both are ligands for receptors in the nuclear receptor
superfamily, which act as ligand-dependent transcription factors,
regulating transcription. However, estrogens and thyroid hormones
also rapidly (within minutes or seconds) activate kinase cascades
and calcium increases, presumably initiated at the cell membrane.
We discuss the relevance of both modes of hormone action,
including the membrane estrogen receptor, to physiology, with
particular reference to lordosis behavior. We first showed
that estrogen restricted to the membrane can, in fact, lead
to subsequent increases in transcription from a consensus
estrogen response element-based reporter in the neuroblastoma
cell line, SK-N-BE(2)C. Using a novel hormonal paradigm, we
also showed that the activation of protein kinase A, protein
kinase C, mitogen activated protein kinase and increases in
calcium were important in the ability of the membrane-limited
estrogen to potentiate transcription. We discuss the source
of calcium important in transcriptional potentiation. Since
estrogens and thyroid hormones have common effects on neuroprotection,
cognition and mood, we also hypothesized that crosstalk could
occur between the rapid actions of thyroid hormones and the
genomic actions of estrogens. In neural cells, we showed that
triiodothyronine acting rapidly via MAPK can increase
transcription by the nuclear estrogen receptor ERα
from a consensus estrogen response element, possibly by the
phosphorylation of the ERα.
Novel mechanisms that link signals initiated by hormones from
the membrane to the nucleus are physiologically relevant and
can achieve neuroendocrine integration.
[Back to top]
Estrogen Receptor-α:
Plasma Membrane Localization and Functions
M. Marino and P. Ascenzi
The knowledge of the molecular mechanism by which estrogens
exert pleiotropic functions in different tissues and organs
has evolved rapidly during the past two decades. It is now
well established that 17β-estradiol
(E2) induces the transcriptional regulation of target gene
expression upon binding to the intracellular estrogen receptor-α
(ERα)
or -β
(ERβ).
In addition E2 modulates cell functions through rapid non-genomic
actions. Stimulation of G-proteins, Ca2+ influx
as well as phospholipase C, ERK/MAPK, and PI3K/AKT activation
occur within seconds to minutes upon E2 binding to a small
population of ERα
located at the plasma membrane. Several laboratories have
recently examined the structural requirements for the localization
and function(s) of plasma membrane ERα.
We have shown that human ERα
location at the plasma membrane and its interaction with caveolin-1
is mediated by S-palmitoylation of the Cys447 residue.
Moreover, E2 also modulates Cys447 S-(de)palmitoylation enabling
ERα
association with signal transduction proteins (e.g.
Src and G-proteins) in a cell context-related fashion. This
leads to downstream signaling important for cell growth and
survival. Here, the structural bases and mechanisms for ERα
localization and action(s) are discussed along with potential
implications for development of new drugs.
[Back to top]
Doing the Puzzle of Steroid Hormone Action: Biological
Functions, Physiological and Clinical Significance of Plasma
Membrane Residing Glucocorticoid Recognizing Proteins
S. Daufeldt and A. Allera
Steroid hormones are indispensable in physical development,
control of vital processes, reproduction and modulation of
behavior. Lack or complete dysfunction of glucocorticoids
(GC), in particular, have lethal consequences. Even a minor
change in the level of circulating cortisol may have physiological
and clinical significance in GC-homeostasis and GC-related
disorders. Knowledge of the action mechanisms of GC and analysis
of their effects is therefore of essential importance, especially
since natural and synthetic GC are widely used in the therapy
of GC-responsive diseases. Most GC effects are assigned to
the nuclear GC receptors (GR) and their co-modulators by activating
or repressing gene expression. Whereas activation mainly requires
DNA binding of the GR-ligand complex, repression is usually
mediated by protein-protein interaction with other transcription
factors, termed transcriptional cross-talk. In addition to
the classical and the cross-talk mode of GR actions, GC also
functionally interact with plasma membrane (PM) binding sites
at the surface of target cells and initiate a number of so
called rapid non-genomic effects similar to signaling by peptide
hormones. It is generally believed that no functional link
exists between the PM-related non-genomic steroid
responses and the nuclear receptor-related genomic effects.
However, some reports indicate that rapid responses can modulate
the genomic pathway of steroids or enhance/impair gene activation.
The corresponding PM-receptors may be (splice) variants of
the GR or GR-unrelated proteins that cooperate with the GR
or not. A PM-located protein in rat and human liver cells,
SHREC (Steroid Hormone Recognition and Effector Complex),
represents a pivotal link in non-genomic and genomic modes
of GC-signal propagation. The different modes of action of
GC and the various PM-receptors are reviewed with emphasis
on the basic biological functions as well as the physiological
and clinical significance of these "extranuclear"
proteins. In addition, a three-dimensional computational model
of SHREC is presented, which may provide the possibility for
rational design of tailor made GC to improve therapy of GC
related diseases.
[Back to top]
Free Radical Attack on Cholesterol: Oxysterols
as Markers of Oxidative Stress and as Bioactive Molecules
F. Micheletta and L. Iuliano
Oxysterols are oxygenated derivatives of cholesterol with
a very short life-time relative to cholesterol. Oxysterols
are present in nanomolar concentrations in biological fluids
underscoring their role as important intermediates in a number
of biochemical pathways including bile acid synthesis, reverse
cholesterol transport, control of cholesterol synthesis in
the brain, and oxidative stress. Most oxysterols are produced
by enzymes of the cytochrome P450 family while others are
produced by free radical reactions. This last group of oxysterols
(stress oxysterols, or SOX) , which are mainly oxygenated
in the C6 or C7 position, have attracted interest for mechanistic
studies in the context of oxidative stress, and for probing
oxidative stress in vivo. Sensitive and specific
mass spectrometric methods have been prepared to measure SOX
in a number of clinical settings, and to follow the changes
induced by pharmacological treatments. Additional interest
in oxidative stress oxysterols is linked to the increasing
number of biological effects, obtained at cellular level and
in animal models, implicated in the pathophysiological mechanisms
that play a role in several diseases, including atherosclerosis,
neurodegeneration, and cancer. Oxysterols have in fact been
shown to induce apoptosis, cell differentiation, cytotoxicity,
and impairment of endothelial function. This review is an
evaluation of the recent literature on oxysterols, in particular
on the role of oxysterols as bioactive compounds. |