Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10847732 Steroids 2010 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) is an important neurosteroid with multiple functions in the central nervous system including neuroprotection. How DHEA exerts its neuroprotection function has not been fully elucidated. One possible mechanism is via its active metabolites, 7α-OH DHEA and 7β-OH DHEA. The purpose of this research is to understand how DHEA is metabolized to 7α-OH DHEA and 7β-OH DHEA by brain tissue. DHEA was incubated with rat brain microsomes and mitochondria and the 7α-OH DHEA and 7β-OH DHEA formed by these fractions were analyzed by LC/MS. For the first time, we observed that DHEA could be metabolized to 7α-OH DHEA and 7β-OH DHEA in mitochondria but the formation of 7α-OH DHEA and 7β-OH DHEA demonstrated different enzymatic kinetic properties. Adding NADPH, an essential cofactor, to mitochondria incubation mixtures increased only the formation of 7α-OH DHEA, but not that of 7β-OH DHEA. Addition of estradiol to the incubation mixtures inhibited only the formation of 7α-OH DHEA, but not that of 7β-OH DHEA. Western blot analysis showed that both microsomes and mitochondria contained cytochrome P450 7B. We also found that 7α-OH DHEA could be converted to 7β-OH DHEA by rat brain homogenates. Our data suggest that 7α-OH DHEA and 7β-OH DHEA are formed by different enzymes and that 7β-OH DHEA can be formed from both DHEA and 7α-OH DHEA, although the overall level of 7β-OH DHEA was very low.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Biochemistry
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