Eric R. Prossnitz

Eric R. Prossnitz
  • PhD
  • Professor at University of New Mexico

About

347
Publications
38,363
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
24,230
Citations
Introduction
Our work focuses on the functions of the estrogen receptor GPER in health and disease through the discovery and use of novel GPER-selective ligands.
Current institution
University of New Mexico
Current position
  • Professor
Additional affiliations
July 2015 - November 2019
University of New Mexico
Position
  • Professor (Full)
July 1994 - November 1997
The Scripps Research Institute
Position
  • Professor (Assistant)
October 1989 - July 1994
The Scripps Research Institute
Position
  • Research Associate
Education
August 1985 - September 1989
University of California, Berkeley
Field of study
  • Biochemistry
July 1982 - August 1985
University of Victoria
Field of study
  • Biochemistry

Publications

Publications (347)
Article
Full-text available
Estrogen is a hormone critical in the development, normal physiology and pathophysiology of numerous human tissues. The effects of estrogen have traditionally been solely ascribed to estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) and more recently ERbeta, members of the soluble, nuclear ligand-activated family of transcription factors. We have recently shown th...
Article
Full-text available
The steroid hormone estrogen regulates many functionally unrelated processes in numerous tissues. Although it is traditionally thought to control transcriptional activation through the classical nuclear estrogen receptors, it also initiates many rapid nongenomic signaling events. We found that of all G protein-coupled receptors characterized to dat...
Article
Full-text available
Estrogen is central to many physiological processes throughout the human body. We have previously shown that the G protein-coupled receptor GPR30 (also known as GPER), in addition to classical nuclear estrogen receptors (ER and ER), activates cellular signaling pathways in response to estrogen. In order to distinguish between the actions of classic...
Article
Full-text available
Human obesity has become a global health epidemic, with few safe and effective pharmacological therapies currently available. The systemic loss of ovarian estradiol (E2) in women after menopause greatly increases the risk of obesity and metabolic dysfunction, revealing the critical role of E2 in this setting. The salutary effects of E2 are traditio...
Article
Estrogen exerts extensive and diverse effects throughout the body of women. In addition to the classical nuclear estrogen receptors (ERα and ERβ), the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor GPER is an important mediator of estrogen action. Existing ER-targeted therapeutic agents act as GPER agonists. Here, we report the identification of a small molec...
Article
Text Estrogens regulate numerous physiological and pathological processes, including wide-ranging effects in wound healing. The effects of estrogens are mediated through multiple estrogen receptors (ERs), including the classical nuclear ERs (ERα and ERβ), that typically regulate gene expression, and the 7-transmembrane G protein-coupled estrogen re...
Article
Full-text available
Estrogens regulate numerous physiological and pathological processes, including wide-ranging effects in wound healing. The effects of estrogens are mediated through multiple estrogen receptors (ERs), including the classical nuclear ERs (ERα and ERβ\documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepack...
Article
Full-text available
The G protein‐coupled estrogen receptor, also known as GPER1 or originally GPR30, is found in various tissues, indicating its diverse functions. It is typically present in immune cells, suggesting its role in regulating immune responses to infectious diseases. Our previous studies have shown that G‐1, a selective GPER agonist, can limit the pathoge...
Article
Among the myriad of molecular alterations associated with cancer, loss of the normal tumor suppressive functions of p53, the “guardian of the genome,” is the most consistent. Thus, the possibility of targeting oncogenic, mutant p53 proteins has long been a therapeutic goal. However, that aspiration has not been fully realized, leaving patients vuln...
Article
Full-text available
The coexistence of brown adipocytes with low and high thermogenic activity is a fundamental feature of brown adipose tissue heterogeneity and plasticity. However, the mechanisms that govern thermogenic adipocyte heterogeneity and its significance in obesity and metabolic disease remain poorly understood. Here we show that in male mice, a population...
Article
Full-text available
The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2023/24 is the sixth in this series of biennial publications. The Concise Guide provides concise overviews, mostly in tabular format, of the key properties of approximately 1800 drug targets, and about 6000 interactions with about 3900 ligands. There is an emphasis on selective pharmacology (where available), plus...
Article
Oestrogens and their receptors contribute broadly to physiology and diseases. In premenopausal women, endogenous oestrogens protect against cardiovascular, metabolic and neurological diseases and are involved in hormone-sensitive cancers such as breast cancer. Oestrogens and oestrogen mimetics mediate their effects via the cytosolic and nuclear rec...
Article
Full-text available
The G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER, nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor [26]) was identified following observations of estrogen-evoked cyclic AMP signalling in breast cancer cells [2], which mirrored the differential expression of an orphan 7-transmembrane receptor GPR30 [6]. Th...
Article
The actions of estrogens and related estrogenic molecules are complex and multifaceted in both sexes. A wide array of natural, synthetic, and therapeutic molecules target pathways that produce and respond to estrogens. Multiple receptors promulgate these responses, including the classical estrogen receptors of the nuclear hormone receptor family (e...
Preprint
Full-text available
The coexistence of brown adipocytes with low and high thermogenic activity is a fundamental feature of brown adipose tissue (BAT) heterogeneity and plasticity. However, the mechanisms that govern thermogenic adipocyte heterogeneity and its significance in obesity and metabolic disease remain poorly understood. In the current study, we identified a...
Article
Full-text available
Obesity and metabolic syndrome are major health issues of modern society and their incidence is increasing at alarming rates worldwide. Obesity and associated chronic diseases exhibit sexual disparity with pre-menopausal females displaying better protection compared to age-matched males. These beneficial effects on metabolism in females are predomi...
Article
Objectives: Estrogen exposure is an established risk factor for ovarian cancer development, but little is known about the impact of estrogen signaling on antitumor immunity. The immunomodulatory effects of estrogen are mediated through canonical estrogen receptors (ER) α and β and through the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER). Accumulating...
Chapter
The classical estrogen receptor α (ERα) has been a clinical therapeutic target for decades. ERα-targeted drugs have shown great clinical success, in particular as antagonists for the treatment of ERα-positive breast cancers. However, ERα-targeted agonists have also been clinically useful (e.g., for the treatment of osteoporosis). The breast cancer...
Chapter
Estrogens, predominantly 17β-estradiol (E2), are a class of steroid hormones critical for diverse functions in the body both during normal physiology and disease. Primary actions of E2 include reproduction and development of secondary sexual characteristics. In addition, E2 action is involved in the nervous, immune, vascular, muscular, skeletal, an...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose This study evaluated epidemiologic and immune factors associated with pathologic complete response (pCR), breast cancer-specific survival (BCSS) and disease-free survival (DFS) outcomes in inflammatory (IBC) and locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) patients. Methods Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) and CD20⁺ B-cell frequencies (CD20⁺...
Article
Full-text available
The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2021/22 is the fifth in this series of biennial publications. The Concise Guide provides concise overviews, mostly in tabular format, of the key properties of nearly 1900 human drug targets with an emphasis on selective pharmacology (where available), plus links to the open access knowledgebase source of drug targe...
Article
Full-text available
The G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER, nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor [25]) was identified following observations of estrogen-evoked cyclic AMP signalling in breast cancer cells [2], which mirrored the differential expression of an orphan 7-transmembrane receptor GPR30 [6]. Th...
Article
Full-text available
Estrogen is involved in numerous physiological and pathophysiological systems. Its role in driving estrogen receptor-expressing breast cancers is well established, but it also has important roles in a number of other cancers, acting both on tumor cells directly as well as in the function of multiple cells of the tumor microenvironment, including fi...
Article
Full-text available
Obesity has become a global epidemic in the modern world with the numbers of obese individuals having risen at alarming rates in the last decades. Obesity represents a serious medical condition that can lead to multiple complications, such as diabetes, dyslipidemia, cardiovascular disease including hypertension and atherosclerosis, stroke and incre...
Article
Background The extensive alveolar capillary network of the lungs is an attractive route for the administration of several agents. One key functional attribute is the rapid onset of systemic action due to the absence of first-pass metabolism. Methods Here, we applied a combinatorial approach for ligand-directed pulmonary delivery as a unique route...
Article
Full-text available
Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) in the gastrointestinal tumor microenvironment (TME) are known to polarize into populations exhibiting pro- or anti-tumoral activity in response to stimuli such as growth factors and cytokines. Our previous work has recognized granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) as a cytokine capable of influencing immu...
Article
Full-text available
Cytokines are known to shape the tumor microenvironment and although progress has been made in understanding their role in carcinogenesis, much remains to learn regarding their role in tumor growth and progression. We have identified granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) as one such cytokine, showing that G-CSF is linked with metastasis in...
Article
Hypertension (HTN) is a polyfactorial disease that can manifest severe cardiovascular pathologies such as heart failure or stroke. Genome Wide Association Studies (GWAS) of HTN indicate that single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) contribute to increased risk for HTN and resistance to some HTN drug regimens (19, 26, 35, 52). However, cellular mechan...
Article
We previously reported sex differences in innate susceptibility to Staphylococcus aureus skin infection and that bone marrow neutrophils (BMN) from female mice have an enhanced ability to kill S. aureus ex vivo compared with those of male mice. However, the mechanism(s) driving this sex bias in neutrophil killing have not been reported. Given the r...
Article
Sex differences in susceptibility to ischemia/reperfusion injury have been documented in humans. Premenopausal women have a lower risk of ischemic heart disease than age‐matched men, whereas after menopause, the risk is similar or even higher in women. However, little is known about the effects of sex on myocutaneous ischemia/reperfusion. To explor...
Conference Paper
Studies from our group and others demonstrate a protective role of estrogen in attenuating the progression of chronic hypoxia (CH)‐induced pulmonary hypertension. Physiological responses to estrogen are mediated by the nuclear estrogen receptors a and b, as well as by the membrane‐bound G protein‐coupled estrogen receptor (GPER). However, the role...
Chapter
Chemoattractant peptide and complement receptors are members of the family of seven transmembrane-spanning G-protein-coupled receptors. Although expressed and characterized predominantly on cells of the immune system, they are also now documented to be expressed on many cell types. In neutrophils they play important roles in chemotaxis and anti-mic...
Article
The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2019/20 is the fourth in this series of biennial publications. The Concise Guide provides concise overviews of the key properties of nearly 1800 human drug targets with an emphasis on selective pharmacology (where available), plus links to the open access knowledgebase source of drug targets and their ligands (www....
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Differences in breast cancer survival by race and ethnicity are often assumed to be a fairly recent phenomenon, and are hypothesized to have arisen due to gaps in receipt of screening or therapy. The emergence of these differences in calendar time have implications for identification of their origin. We sought to determine whether brea...
Article
Full-text available
Obesity exerts adverse effects on breast cancer survival, but the means have not been fully elucidated. We evaluated obesity as a contributor to breast cancer survival according to tumor molecular subtypes in a population-based case–cohort study using data from the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) program. We determined whether obes...
Article
Full-text available
The G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER, nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor [24]) was identified following observations of estrogen-evoked cyclic AMP signalling in breast cancer cells [2], which mirrored the differential expression of an orphan 7-transmembrane receptor GPR30 [5]. Th...
Article
Chronic non-communicable diseases share the pathomechanism of increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) production by nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidases, known as Nox. The recent discovery that expression of Nox1, a Nox isoform that has been implicated in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular and kidney disease, is regulated by...
Article
Endocrine therapy is an effective option for the treatment of estrogen receptor alpha (ERα)-positive breast cancers. Unfortunately, a large fraction of women relapse with endocrine-resistant tumors. The presence of constitutively active ERα mutants, found in a subset of relapse tumors, is thought to be an important endocrine resistance mechanism an...
Article
Full-text available
Estrogens play important roles in the development and progression of multiple tumor types. Accumulating evidence points to the significance of estrogen action not only in tumors of hormonally regulated tissues such as the breast, endometrium and ovary, but also in the development of colorectal cancer (CRC). The effects of estrogens in physiological...
Article
Full-text available
The NIH-funded center for autophagy research named Autophagy, Inflammation, and Metabolism (AIM) Center of Biomedical Research Excellence, located at the University of New Mexico Health Science Center is now completing its second year as a working center with a mission to promote autophagy research locally, nationally, and internationally. The cent...
Article
Full-text available
Sex bias in innate defense against Staphylococcus aureus skin and soft tissue infection (SSTI) is dependent on both estrogen production by the host and S. aureus secretion of the virulence factor, α-hemolysin (Hla). The impact of estrogen signaling on the immune system is most often studied in terms of the nuclear estrogen receptors ERα and ERβ. Ho...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose: The purpose of the study was to evaluate protein expression of PD-L1 and CD20 as prognostic biomarkers of patient outcome in inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) samples. Methods: PD-L1 and CD20 protein expression was measured by immunohistochemistry in 221 pretreatment IBC biopsies. PD-L1 was assessed in tumor cells (PD-L1+ tumor cells) an...
Article
We recently found that the G-protein coupled estrogen receptor (GPER) exerts constitutive effects on cell proliferation and fibrosis in heart failure and arterial hypertension via the NADPH oxidase isoform Nox1 (Sci Signal 2016; 9(452): ra105). Whether GPER affects glomerulosclerosis or podocyte function is unknown. Thus, the present study investig...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose: The role of appropriate therapy in breast cancer survival and survival disparities by race/ethnicity has not been fully elucidated. We investigated whether lack of guideline-recommended therapy contributed to survival differences overall and among Hispanics relative to non-Hispanic white (NHW) women in a case-cohort study. Methods: The...
Article
Recently, NIH has funded a center for autophagy research named the Autophagy, Inflammation, and Metabolism (AIM) Center of Biomedical Research Excellence, located at the University of New Mexico Health Science Center (UNM HSC), with aspirations to promote autophagy research locally, nationally, and internationally. The center has 3 major missions:...
Article
Chronic hypoxia (CH) resulting from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, sleep apnea, and high altitude exposure leads to oxidative stress and increased pulmonary vascular resistance. The resultant pulmonary hypertension (PH) contributes to right ventricular hypertrophy and may culminate in right heart failure, peripheral edema, and dyspnea. Beca...
Article
Objective: This study aimed to identify the hormonal receptor status in uterine adenosarcoma (AS) and uterine AS with sarcomatous overgrowth (AS + SO), including those with high-grade histologic features (nuclear pleomorphism, atypical mitoses, necrosis), with or without heterologous elements. Estrogen receptor (ER) status, including estrogen rece...
Chapter
Obesity and metabolic syndrome display disparate prevalence and regulation between males and females. Human, as well as rodent, females with regular menstrual/estrous cycles exhibit protection from weight gain and associated chronic diseases. These beneficial effects are predominantly attributed to the female hormone estrogen, specifically 17β-estr...
Article
Full-text available
Numerous studies have reported sex bias in infectious diseases, with bias direction dependent on pathogen and site of infection. Staphylococcus aureus is the most common cause of skin and soft tissue infections (SSTIs), yet sex bias in susceptibility to S. aureus SSTI has not been described. A search of electronic health records revealed an odds ra...
Article
Full-text available
PurposeWhile the estrogen receptor (ER) is the single most widely used biomarker to evaluate breast cancer outcomes, aspects of ER marker biology remain poorly understood. We sought to determine whether quantitative measures of ER, such as protein expression and intensity, were associated with survival, or with survival disparities experienced by H...
Article
Epidemiologic studies report improved breast cancer survival in women receiving ketorolac (Toradol®) for post-operative pain relief compared to other analgesics. Ketorolac is a racemic drug. The S-enantiomer inhibits cyclooxygenases; R-ketorolac is a selective inhibitor of the small GTPases Ras-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 1 (Rac1) and cell...
Article
Aging is associated with impaired renal artery function, which is partly characterized by arterial stiffening and a reduced vasodilatory capacity due to excessive generation of reactive oxygen species by NADPH oxidases (Nox). The abundance and activity of Nox depends on basal activity of the heptahelical transmembrane receptor GPER; however, whethe...
Article
Estrogens are potent regulators of vascular tone, yet underlying receptor- and ligand-specific signaling pathways remain poorly characterized. The primary physiological estrogen 17β-estradiol (E2), a non-selective agonist of classical nuclear estrogen receptors (ERα and ERβ) as well as the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER), stimulates form...
Article
The (patho)physiology of estrogen and its receptors is complex. It is therefore not surprising that therapeutic approaches targeting this hormone include stimulation of its activity through supplementation with either the hormone itself or natural or synthetic agonists, inhibition of its activity through the use of antagonists or inhibitors of its...
Article
Estrogens play a critical role in many aspects of female physiology, particularly reproductive function, but also in pathophysiology, and are associated with protection from numerous diseases in premenopausal women. Steroids and particularly estrogen action have been known for ∼90 years, with the first evidence for a receptor for estrogen presented...
Article
Metabolic homeostasis is differentially regulated in males and females. The lower incidence of obesity and associated diseases in pre-menopausal females points towards the beneficial role of the predominant estrogen, 17β-estradiol (E2). The actions of E2 are elicited by nuclear and extra-nuclear estrogen receptor (ER) α and ERβ, as well as the G pr...
Article
Introduction: In New Mexico, Hispanic women have a 1.7-fold increased risk of breast cancer-specific death compared to non-Hispanic white women. In previous studies, race/ethnic minority women have had larger survival disparities in estrogen receptor positive (ER+) than ER- disease, suggesting some aspect of ER may mediate survival outcomes. We thu...
Article
Pharmacological activation of the heptahelical G protein–coupled estrogen receptor (GPER) by selective ligands coun- teracts multiple aspects of cardiovascular disease. We thus expected that genetic deletion or pharmacological inhibi- tion of GPER would further aggravate such disease states, particularly with age. To the contrary, we found that gen...
Article
Full-text available
Significance Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is defined clinically and pathologically. Dermal lymphatic invasion is typical but is neither necessary nor sufficient for diagnosis; sentinel lymph node biopsy is contraindicated, challenging multidisciplinary management with upfront chemotherapy, surgery, and postoperative radiotherapy. Here we applie...
Article
Introduction: In New Mexico (NM), Hispanic women have a 1.6-fold increased risk of breast cancer-specific death compared to non-Hispanic white women. In previous studies, race/ethnic minority women have been less likely to receive recommended adjuvant treatments, including radiation in women undergoing breast conservation, and hormonal therapy. Obj...
Article
Aims: Cardiac aging is associated with progressive structural changes and functional impairment, such as left ventricular hypertrophy, fibrosis and diastolic dysfunction. Aging also increases myocardial activity of endothelin-1 (ET-1), a multifunctional peptide with growth-promoting and pro-fibrotic activity. Because the G protein-coupled estrogen...
Article
Full-text available
Arrestins were originally described as proteins recruited to ligand-activated, phosphorylated G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) to attenuate G protein-mediated signaling. It was later revealed that arrestins also mediate GPCR internalization and recruit a number of signaling proteins including, but not limited to, Src family kinases, ERK1/2, and...
Data
Line scans of ligand, arrestin and either Rab11, AP-2 or AP-1 demonstrating colocalization in 633-6pep stimulated Arr-2-/-/-3-/- FPR cells. Arr-2-/-/-3-/- FPR cells were transiently co-transfected with either Rab11-GFP (A), AP-2-GFP (B) or AP-1-GFP (C) and either empty mRFP vector (mRFP only), wild type arrestin-2-RFP (Arrestin-WT) or arr2-P91G/P12...
Data
Lack of arrestin and Rab11 colocalization in unstimulated Arr-2-/-/-3-/- FPR cells. Arr-2-/-/-3-/- FPR cells were transiently co-transfected with Rab11-GFP and either empty mRFP vector (Empty), wild type arrestin-2-RFP (WT) or arr2-P91G/P121E-RFP (P91G/P121E) along with the pUSE Src construct indicated below (D-F). Cells were treated and processed...
Data
Ligand, arrestin and Rab11 localization in stimulated Arr-2-/-/-3-/- FPR cells. Rab11-GFP and either empty mRFP vector (Empty), wild type arrestin-2-RFP (WT) or arr2-P91G/P121E-RFP (P91G/P121E) along with the pUSE Src construct indicated below (B-C). Cells were stimulated with 10 nM 633-6pep for 60 min and viewed by confocal fluorescence microscopy...
Chapter
Full-text available
Endogenous estrogens, predominantly 17β-estradiol (E2), mediate various diverse effects throughout the body in both normal physiology and disease. Actions include development (including puberty) and reproduction as well as additional effects throughout life in the metabolic, endocrine, musculoskeletal, nervous, cardiovascular, and immune systems. T...
Article
Full-text available
Background Estrogen (17β-estradiol) promotes the survival and proliferation of breast cancer cells and its receptors represent important therapeutic targets. The cellular actions of estrogen are mediated by the nuclear estrogen receptors ERα and ERβ as well as the 7-transmembrane spanning G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER). We previously re...
Article
Full-text available
Due to errors by the publisher, an incorrect version of the Supplementary Information file was originally published with this article, omitting the LDL cholesterol values in Supplementary Tables I and II. The correct Supplementary Information now accompanies the article.
Article
Aging is associated with reduced vasodilatory capacity in renal arteries. Activation of the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER) induces vasodilation and improves hypertensive renal injury in rats. Moreover, GPER, as observed with many G protein-coupled receptors, likely exhibits “basal activity” independent of ovarian estrogen production, wh...
Article
Complications of atherosclerotic vascular disease, such as myocardial infarction and stroke, are the most common cause of death in postmenopausal women. Endogenous estrogens inhibit vascular inflammation-driven atherogenesis, a process that involves cyclooxygenase-derived vasoconstrictor prostanoids such as thromboxane A2. Here, we studied whether...
Article
Full-text available
Aging is a major risk factor for carotid artery disease that may lead to stroke and dementia. Vascular effects associated with aging include increased vasomotor tone, as well as enhanced contractility to endothelial vasoconstrictor prostanoids and reduced nitric oxide (NO) bioactivity partly due to increased oxidative stress. We hypothesized that v...
Article
Uterine adenosarcomas (AS) are rare uterine tumors with benign epithelium and a sarcomatous component which is typically low-grade. Those displaying sarcomatous overgrowth (AS+SO) behave in a more aggressive fashion and are associated with worse clinical outcomes. Immunohistochemistry performed on AS and AS+SO have shown a greater preponderance for...
Article
Estrogens, predominantly 17β-estradiol, exert diverse effects throughout the body in both normal and patho-physiology, during development and in reproductive, metabolic, endocrine, cardiovascular, nervous, musculoskeletal and immune systems. Estrogen and its receptors also play important roles in carcinogenesis and therapy, particularly for breast...
Article
Estrogens are critical mediators of multiple and diverse physiologic effects throughout the body in both sexes, including the reproductive, cardiovascular, endocrine, nervous, and immune systems. As such, alterations in estrogen function play important roles in many diseases and pathophysiological conditions (including cancer), exemplified by the l...
Article
The G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER) is a 7-transmembrane receptor implicated in rapid estrogen signaling. Originally cloned from vascular endothelial cells, GPER plays a central role in the regulation of vascular tone and cell growth as well as lipid and glucose homeostasis. This review highlights our knowledge of the physiological and p...
Article
Full-text available
The pesticide atrazine does not bind or activate the classical estrogen receptor (ER), but up-regulates the aromatase activity in estrogen-sensitive tumor cells. It has recently been reported that the G protein estrogen receptor (GPR30/GPER) is involved in certain biological responses to endogenous estrogens and environmental compounds exerting est...
Article
Full-text available
Coronary atherosclerosis and myocardial infarction in postmenopausal women have been linked to inflammation and reduced nitric oxide (NO) formation. Natural estrogen exerts protective effects on both processes, yet also displays uterotrophic activity. Here, we used genetic and pharmacologic approaches to investigate the role of the G protein-couple...
Article
Full-text available
Aims Aging, a physiological process and main risk factor for cardiovascular and renal diseases, is associated with endothelial cell dysfunction partly resulting from NADPH oxidase-dependent oxidative stress. Because increased formation of endothelium-derived endothelin-1 (ET-1) may contribute to vascular aging, we studied the role of NADPH oxidase...
Article
Full-text available
Evasion of killing by the complement system, a crucial part of innate immunity, is a key evolutionary strategy of many human pathogens. A major etiological agent of chronic periodontitis, the Gram-negative bacterium Porphyromonas gingivalis, produces a vast arsenal of virulence factors that compromise human defense mechanisms. One of these is pepti...
Article
Endogenous estrogens mediate protective effects in the cardiovascular system in part due to rapid activation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), which involves the classical estrogen receptor (ER) α. Estrogen-dependent increases in NO bioactivity may also be mediated by the G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER/GPR30), although the con...
Article
Full-text available
The role of 17β-estradiol (E2) in breast cancer development and tumor growth has traditionally been attributed exclusively to the activation of estrogen receptor-α (ERα). Although targeted inhibition of ERα is a successful approach for patients with ERα⁺ breast cancer, many patients fail to respond or become resistant to anti-estrogen therapy. The...
Article
Full-text available
Our understanding of estrogen (17β-estradiol, E2) receptor biology has evolved in recent years with the discovery and characterization of a 7-transmembrane-spanning G protein–coupled estrogen receptor (GPER/GPR30) and the development of GPER-selective functional chemical probes. GPER is highly expressed in certain breast, endometrial, and ovarian c...
Article
Full-text available
Estradiol (E2) modulates testicular functions including steroidogenesis, but the mechanisms of E2 signaling in human testis are poorly understood. GPER-1 (GPR30), a G protein-coupled membrane receptor, mediates rapid genomic and non-genomic response to estrogens. The aim of this study was to evaluate GPER-1 expression in the testis, and its role in...
Article
17β-Estradiol (estrogen), through receptor binding and activation, is required for mammary gland development. Estrogen stimulates epithelial proliferation in the mammary gland, promoting ductal elongation and morphogenesis. In addition to a developmental role, estrogen promotes proliferation in tumorigenic settings, particularly breast cancer. The...
Article
In addition to its genomic effects, the steroid hormone estrogen has been shown to mediate rapid signaling events in diverse cell types, including breast cancer cells. These effects are, in part, mediated through its canonical soluble nuclear receptor, ERα. However, a novel estrogen receptor known as GPER (previously termed GPR30) has been demonstr...
Article
Endogenous estrogens mediate protective effects in the cardiovascular system in part due to rapid activation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), which involves the classical estrogen receptor (ER) α. In intact blood vessels, nitric oxide (NO) bioactivity is also regulated by the G protein‐coupled estrogen receptor (GPER/GPR30), suggesting...
Article
Full-text available
Aims Aging is a major risk factor for carotid artery disease and stroke. Endothelin-1 (ET-1) and angiotensin II (Ang II) are important modifiers of vascular disease, partly through increased activity of NADPH oxidase and vasoconstrictor prostanoids. Since the renin-angiotensin and endothelin systems become activated with age, we hypothesized that a...

Network

Cited By