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Endocrine disrupting chemicals are adversely affecting the reproductive health and metabolic status of aquatic vertebrates. Estrone is often the dominant natural estrogen in urban sewage, yet little is known about its environmental fate and biological effects. Increased use of UV-B radiation for effluent treatments, and exposure of effluents to sunlight in holding ponds led us to examine the effects of environmentally relevant levels of UV-B radiation on the photodegradation potential of estrone. Surprisingly, UV-B-mediated degradation leads to the photoproduction of lumiestrone, a little known 13α-epimer form of estrone. We show for the first time that lumiestrone possesses novel biological activity. In vivo treatment with estrone stimulated estrogen receptor (ER) α mRNA production in the male goldfish liver, whereas lumiestrone was without effect, suggesting a total loss of estrogenicity. In contrast, results from in vitro ER-dependent reporter gene assays indicate that lumiestrone showed relatively higher estrogenic potency with the zebrafish ERβ2 than zfERα, suggesting that it may act through an ERβ-selectivity. Lumiestrone also activated human ERs. Microarray analysis of male goldfish liver following in vivo treatments showed that lumiestrone respectively up- and down-regulated 20 and 69 mRNAs, which was indicative of metabolic upsets and endocrine activities. As a photodegradation product from a common estrogen of both human and farm animal origin, lumiestrone is present in sewage effluent, is produced from estrone upon exposure to natural sunlight and should be considered as a new environmental contaminant.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2011.00083 | DOI Listing |
Chem Asian J
December 2024
N. D. Zelinsky Institute of Organic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, 47 Leninsky Prosp., 119991, Moscow, Russian Federation.
A preparation method for steroid-based difluoroboron complexes has been developed using lumiestrone as a steroid example. Previously inaccessible lumiestrone-based difluoroboron complexes annulated at positions 16 and 17 of the D ring have been prepared. Such difluoroboron complexes may have large synthetic potential for heterofunctionalization of steroids at the D ring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotochem Photobiol
July 2022
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights, KY, USA.
The direct photolysis of estrone in solvents ranging from water to cyclohexane is reported. The photodegradation is dominated by lumiestrone, an epimer of estrone resulting from the inversion of the methyl group at carbon 13, regardless of solvent and photolysis wavelength in the range 254-320 nm. Solvent addition products are also observed in lesser amounts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Org Chem
June 2019
Universidad de Buenos Aires , Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Departamento de Química Orgánica , Buenos Aires , C1428EGA , Argentina.
Irradiation of a series of 3-acylestrones under a nitrogen atmosphere in cyclohexane, acetonitrile (MeCN), and methanol (MeOH) was investigated under steady-state conditions. The molecules underwent the photo-Fries rearrangement, with concomitant homolytic fragmentation of the ester group and [1;3]-acyl migration. This pathway afforded the ortho-acyl estrone derivatives, the main photoproducts, together with estrone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
October 2012
Department of Chemistry, Seattle University, 901 12th Avenue, Seattle, WA 98122, USA.
Steroid estrogens are endocrine disrupting contaminants frequently detected in natural waters. Because these estrogens can elicit significant biological responses in aquatic organisms, it is important to study their rates and pathways of degradation in natural waters and to identify whether the transformation products retain biological activity. Photochemical kinetics experiments were conducted under simulated solar light for the hormones 17β-estradiol (E2), 17α-ethinylestradiol (EE2), estrone (E1), equilin (EQ), and equilenin (EQN) under direct and indirect photolysis conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Endocrinol (Lausanne)
August 2012
Department of Biology, Centre for Advanced Research in Environmental Genomics, University of Ottawa Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Endocrine disrupting chemicals are adversely affecting the reproductive health and metabolic status of aquatic vertebrates. Estrone is often the dominant natural estrogen in urban sewage, yet little is known about its environmental fate and biological effects. Increased use of UV-B radiation for effluent treatments, and exposure of effluents to sunlight in holding ponds led us to examine the effects of environmentally relevant levels of UV-B radiation on the photodegradation potential of estrone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF