Regular Article
Novel Mechanisms of Estrogen Action in the Brain: New Players in an Old Story,☆☆

https://doi.org/10.1006/frne.1999.0177Get rights and content
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Abstract

Estrogen elicits a selective enhancement of the growth and differentiation of axons and dendrites (neurites) in the developing brain. Widespread colocalization of estrogen and neurotrophin receptors (trk) within estrogen and neurotrophin targets, including neurons of the cerebral cortex, sensory ganglia, and PC12 cells, has been shown to result in differential and reciprocal transcriptional regulation of these receptors by their ligands. In addition, estrogen and neurotrophin receptor coexpression leads to convergence or cross-coupling of their signaling pathways, particularly at the level of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase cascade. 17β-Estradiol elicits rapid (within 5–15 min) and sustained (at least 2 h) tyrosine phosphorylation and activation of the MAP kinases, extracellular-signal regulated kinase (ERK)1, and ERK2, which is successfully inhibited by the MAP kinase/ERK kinase 1 inhibitor PD98059, but not by the estrogen receptor (ER) antagonist ICI 182,780 and also does not appear to result from estradiol-induced activation oftrk.Furthermore, the ability of estradiol to phosphorylate ERK persists even in ER-α knockout mice, implicating other estrogen receptors such as ER-β in these actions of estradiol. The existence of an estrogen receptor-containing, multimeric complex consisting of hsp90,src,and B-Raf also suggests a direct link between the estrogen receptor and the MAP kinase signaling cascade. Collectively, these novel findings, coupled with our growing understanding of additional signaling substrates utilized by estrogen, provide alternative mechanisms for estrogen action in the developing brain which could explain not only some of the very rapid effects of estrogen, but also the ability of estrogen and neurotrophins to regulate the same broad array of cytoskeletal and growth-associated genes involved in neurite growth and differentiation. This review expands the usually restrictive view of estrogen action in the brain beyond the confines of sexual differentiation and reproductive neuroendocrine function. It considers the much broader question of estrogen as a neural growth factor with important influences on the development, survival, plasticity, regeneration, and aging of the mammalian brain and supports the view that the estrogen receptor is not only a ligand-induced transcriptional enhancer but also a mediator of rapid, nongenomic events.

Keywords

estradiol
estrogen receptor
neurotrophins
neurotrophin receptors, signal transduction
cross-coupling
brain.

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Reprint requests should be addressed to Dominique Toran-Allerand at Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, 650 West 168th Street, BB 1615, New York, NY 10032. Fax: (212) 305-3970. E-mail:[email protected].

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Baulieu, E, ERobel, PSchumacher, M