Cortisol to cortisone: glucocorticoid to mineralocorticoid.
Abstract
11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11 beta-HSD), by converting cortisol and corticosterone to hormonally inactive cortisone and 11-dehydrocorticosterone, respectively, is an important pre-receptor signaling pathway for the renal mineralocorticoid receptor (MR).
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This receptor has an equal affinity for the glucocorticoids, cortisol and corticosterone, and for the mineralocorticoid, aldosterone. In states of 11 beta-HSD deficiency such as the syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess (AME) and licorice ingestion, cortisol acts as a potent mineralocorticoid. In addition to the established and cloned type I 11 beta-HSD, a second 11 beta-HSD isoform has been reported in rabbit kidney and human placenta. We have analyzed the kinetics of 11 beta-HSD activity in human kidney and compared it with the expressed human type I 11 beta-HSD cDNA. Microsomes were prepared from mid-gestational human fetal kidneys and incubated with various concentrations of cortisol (0.0125-10 microM) and NAD or NADP. Kinetic analysis revealed a high affinity (apparent Km 60 nM) isoform, the activity of which was exclusively NAD-dependent. No convincing NADP-dependent activity was seen. Similarly with cortisone as a substrate no 11-oxoreductase activity was evident. In contrast, when type I human 11 beta-HSD was ligated into the expression vector pcDNAI and transiently transfected into COS-I cells, low affinity (apparent Km 2.1 microM) NADP-dependent activity was seen. 11-Oxoreductase activity was also observed. The cloned type I human 11 beta-HSD encodes an enzyme with both low-affinity, NADP-dependent, dehydrogenase and 11-oxoreductase activities, but this activity is absent in human fetal kidney (and probably adult kidney).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS).
Original Article: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/7792800/