Anabolic Androgenic Steroids and Intracellular Calcium Signaling: A Mini Review on Mechanisms and Physiological Implications

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Anabolic Androgenic Steroids and Intracellular Calcium Signaling: A Mini Review on Mechanisms and Physiological Implications

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Anabolic Androgenic Steroids and Intracellular Calcium Signaling: A Mini Review on Mechanisms and Physiological Implications

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Title: Anabolic Androgenic Steroids and Intracellular Calcium Signaling: A Mini Review on Mechanisms and Physiological Implications
Author: Vicencio Bustamante, José Manuel; Estrada, M.; Galvis, D.; Bravo, R.; Contreras Ferrat, Ariel Eduardo; Rotter, D.; Szabadkai, G.; Hill, Joseph A.; Rothermel, B. A.; Jaimovich, E.; Lavandero, Sergio
Abstract: Increasing evidence suggests that nongenomic effects of testosterone and anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS) operate concertedly with genomic effects. Classically, these responses have been viewed as separate and independent processes, primarily because nongenomic responses are faster and appear to be mediated by membrane androgen receptors, whereas long-term genomic effects are mediated through cytosolic androgen receptors regulating transcriptional activity. Numerous studies have demonstrated increases in intracellular Ca(2+) in response to AAS. These Ca(2+) mediated responses have been seen in a diversity of cell types, including osteoblasts, platelets, skeletal muscle cells, cardiac myocytes and neurons. The versatility of Ca(2+) as a second messenger provides these responses with a vast number of pathophysiological implications. In cardiac cells, testosterone elicits voltage-dependent Ca(2+) oscillations and IP(3)R-mediated Ca(2+) release from internal stores, leading to activation of MAPK and mTOR signaling that promotes cardiac hypertrophy. In neurons, depending upon concentration, testosterone can provoke either physiological Ca(2+) oscillations, essential for synaptic plasticity, or sustained, pathological Ca(2+) transients that lead to neuronal apoptosis. We propose therefore, that Ca(2+) acts as an important point of crosstalk between nongenomic and genomic AAS signaling, representing a central regulator that bridges these previously thought to be divergent responses.
Description: Artículo de publicación ISI
URI: http://www.captura.uchile.cl/handle/2250/14539
Date: 2011-05
dc.identifier.citation: MINI-REVIEWS IN MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY 11 (5): 390-398


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