Steroid Wiki
Steroid Wiki
Steroid Wiki
This article is about the family of polycyclic chemical compounds. For the performanceenhancing substances, seeAnabolic steroid. For the scientific journal, see Steroids
(journal).
Steroid ring system: The parent ABCD steroid ring system (hydrocarbon framework) is
shown with IUPAC-approved ring lettering and atom numbering.[1]:1785f
A steroid is an organic compound with four rings arranged in a specificconfiguration.
Examples include the dietary lipid cholesterol, the sex
hormonesestradiol and testosterone[2]:1019 and the antiinflammatory drug dexamethasone.[3]Steroids have two principal biological functions:
certain steroids (such as cholesterol) are important components of cell
membranes which alter membrane fluidity, and many steroids are signaling
molecules which activate steroid hormone receptors.
The steroid core structure is composed of seventeen carbon atoms, bonded in four
"fused" rings: three six-member cyclohexane rings (rings A, B and C in the first
illustration) and one five-member cyclopentane ring (the D ring). Steroids vary by the
functional groups attached to this four-ring core and by the oxidation state of the
rings. Sterols are forms of steroids with a hydroxyl group at position three and a
skeleton derived from cholestane.[4][1]:1785f [5] They can also vary more markedly by
changes to the ring structure (for example, ring scissions which
produce secosteroids such as vitamin D3).
Hundreds of steroids are found in plants, animals and fungi. All steroids are
manufactured in cells from the sterols lanosterol(animals and fungi)
or cycloartenol (plants). Lanosterol and cycloartenol are derived from the cyclization of
the triterpenesqualene.[6]
Space-filling representation
Ball-and-stick representation
5-dihydroprogesterone (5-DHP), a steroid. The shape of the four rings of most
steroids is illustrated (carbon atoms in black, oxygens in red and hydrogens in grey).
The apolar "slab" of hydrocarbon in the middle (grey, black) and the polar groups at
opposing ends (red) are common features of natural steroids. 5-DHP is an
endogenous steroid hormone and abiosynthetic intermediate.
Contents
[hide]
1Nomenclature
3Types
o
4Biological significance
5Pharmacological action
6.1Mevalonate pathway
6.2Steroidogenesis
6.3Alternative pathways
9Chemical synthesis
10Research awards
11See also
12References
13Further reading
14External links
Nomenclature[edit]
Testosterone,
the principal
male sex
hormone and
ananabolic
steroid
Progesterone, a steroid
hormone involved in the
female menstrual cycle,
pregnancy, and
embryogenesis
Dexamethasone,
a
syntheticcorticost
eroid drug
Medrogestone, a
synthetic drug with
effects similar to
progesterone
Lanosterol,
the biosynthetic precursor
to animal steroids. The
number of carbons (30)
indicates
itstriterpenoid classificatio
n.
In addition to the ring scissions (cleavages), expansions and contractions (cleavage and
reclosing to a larger or smaller rings)all variations in the carbon-carbon bond
frameworksteroids can also vary:
in the functional groups attached to the rings and side chain, and
Steroid 5 and
5stereoisomers[1]:1786f
Cholesterol,
a prototypical animal sterol.
This structural lipid and key
steroid biosynthetic precursor.
[1]:1785f
5-cholestane, a common
steroid core
Sex hormones, which influence sex differences and support reproduction. These
include androgens, estrogens, andprogestagens.
Anabolic steroids, natural and synthetic, which interact with androgen receptors
to increase muscle and bone synthesis. In popular use, the term "steroids" often
refers to anabolic steroids.
Plant steroids include steroidal alkaloids found in Solanaceae,[7] the phytosterols, and
the brassinosteroids (which include several plant hormones). In prokaryotes,
biosynthetic pathways exist for the tetracyclic steroid framework (e.g. inmycobacteria)
[8]
Example
Cholestanes
Cholesterol
27
Cholanes
Cholic acid
24
Pregnanes
Progesterone
21
Androstanes
Testosterone
19
Estranes
Estradiol
18
The gonane (steroid nucleus) is the parent 17-carbon tetracyclic hydrocarbon molecule
with no alkyl sidechains.[11]
Cleaved, contracted, and expanded rings[edit]
Secosteroids (Latin seco, "to cut") are a subclass of steroidal compounds
resulting,biosynthetically or conceptually, from scission (cleavage) of parent steroid
rings (generally one of the four). Major secosteroid subclasses are defined by the
steroid carbon atoms where this scission has taken place. For instance, the prototypical
secosteroid cholecalciferol, vitamin D3 (shown), is in the 9,10-secosteroid subclass and
derives from the cleavage of carbon atoms C-9 and C-10 of the steroid B-ring; 5,6secosteroids and 13,14-steroids are similar.[12]
Norsteroids (nor-, L. norma; "normal" in chemistry, indicating carbon removal) [13] and
homosteroids (homo-, Greek homos; "same", indicating carbon addition) are structural
subclasses of steroids formed from biosynthetic steps. The former involves enzymic ring
expansion-contraction reactions, and the latter is accomplished (biomimetically) or
(more frequently) through ring closures of acyclicprecursors with more (or fewer) ring
atoms than the parent steroid framework.[14]
Combinations of these ring alterations are known in nature. For instance, ewes who
graze on corn lily[disambiguation needed]ingest cyclopamine (shown) and veratramine, two of a
sub-family of steroids where the C- and D-rings are contracted and expanded
respectively via a biosynthetic migration of the original C-13 atom. Ingestion of these Cnor-D-homosteroids results in birth defects in lambs: cyclopia from cyclopamine and leg
deformity from veratramine.[15] A further C-nor-D-homosteroid (nakiterpiosin) is excreted
by Okinawan cyanobacteriosponges Terpios hoshinota leading to coral mortality
from black coral disease.[16] Nakiterpiosin-type steroids are active against the signaling
pathway involving the smoothenedand hedgehog proteins, a pathway which is
hyperactive in a number of cancers.
Biological significance[edit]
Steroids and their metabolites often function as signalling molecules (the most notable
examples are steroid hormones), and steroids and phospholipids are components
of cell membranes. Steroids such as cholesterol decrease membrane fluidity.[17]Similar
to lipids, steroids are highly concentrated energy stores. However, they are not typically
sources of energy; in mammals, they are normally metabolized and excreted.
Pharmacological action[edit]
Two classes of drugs target the mevalonate pathway: statins (used to reduce elevated
cholesterol levels) andbisphosphonates (used to treat a number of bone-degenerative
diseases).
Biosynthesis and metabolism[edit]
The hundreds of steroids found in animals, fungi, and plants are made
from lanosterol (in animals and fungi; see examples above) or cycloartenol (in plants).
Lanosterol and cycloartenol derive from cyclization of the triterpenoid squalene.[6]
Mevalonate pathway
The mevalonate, or HMG-CoA reductase pathway begins with acetyl-CoA and ends
with dimethylallyl pyrophosphate (DMAPP) and isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP).
DMAPP and IPP donate isoprene units, which are assembled and modified to
formterpenes and isoprenoids[19] (a large class of lipids, which include
the carotenoidsand form the largest class of plant natural products.[20] Here, the
isoprene units are joined to make squalene and folded into a set of rings to
make lanosterol.[21]Lanosterol can then be converted into other steroids, such as
cholesterol andergosterol.[21][22]
Steroidogenesis[edit]
Human steroidogenesis, with the major classes of steroid hormones, individual steroids
and enzymaticpathways. Changes in molecular structure from a precursor are
highlighted in white.
Steroidogenesis is the biological process by which steroids are generated from
cholesterol and changed into other steroids. [23] The pathways of steroidogenesis differ
among species. The major classes of steroid hormones, with prominent members and
examples of related functions, are:
Progestogens:
Androgens:
Progestogens are the precursors of all other human steroids, and all human
tissues which produce steroids must first convert cholesterol to pregnenolone. This
conversion is the rate-limiting step of steroid synthesis, which occurs inside
the mitochondrion of the respective tissue.[24]
Corticosteroids are produced in the adrenal cortex.
Some neurons and glia in the central nervous system (CNS) express
the enzymes required for the local synthesis ofpregnane neurosteroids, de novo or
from peripheral sources.
Alternative pathways[edit]
In plants and bacteria, the non-mevalonate pathway uses pyruvate and glyceraldehyde
3-phosphate as substrates.[19][25]
Catabolism and excretion[edit]
Steroids are primarily oxidized by cytochrome P450 oxidase enzymes, such
as CYP3A4. These reactions introduce oxygen into the steroid ring, allowing the
cholesterol to be broken up by other enzymes into bile acids. [26] These acids can then be
eliminated by secretion from the liver in bile.[27] The expression of the oxidase gene can
be upregulated by the steroid sensor PXR when there is a high blood concentration of
steroids.[28] Steroid hormones, lacking the side chain of cholesterol and bile acids, are
typically hydroxylated at various ring positions or oxidized at the 17
position, conjugted with sulfate orglucuronic acid and excreted in the urine.[29]
Isolation, structure determination, and methods of analysis[edit]
Steroid isolation, depending on context, is the isolation of chemical matter required
for chemical structure elucidation, derivitzation or degradation chemistry, biological
testing, and other research needs (generally milligrams to grams, but often more [30] or
the isolation of "analytical quantities" of the substance of interest (where the focus is on
identifying and quantifying the substance (for example, in biological tissue or fluid). The
amount isolated depends on the analytical method, but is generally less than one
microgram.[31][page needed] The methods of isolation to achieve the two scales of product are
distinct, but include extraction, precipitation, adsorption, chromatography,
and crystallization. In both cases, the isolated substance is purified to chemical
homogeneity; combined separation and analytical methods, such as LC-MS, are chosen
to be "orthogonal"achieving their separations based on distinct modes of interaction
between substance and isolating matrixto detect a single species in the pure
sample. Structure determination refers to the methods to determine the chemical
structure of an isolated pure steroid, using an evolving array of chemical and physical
methods which have included NMRand small-molecule crystallography.[2]:1019 Methods
of analysis overlap both of the above areas, emphasizing analytical methods to
determining if a steroid is present in a mixture and determining its quantity.[31]
Chemical synthesis[edit]
Microbial catabolism of phytosterol sidechains yields C-19 steroids, a precursor to most
steroid hormones, or C-22 steroids (a precursor to adrenocortical hormones).[32][33]
The chemical conversion of sapogenins to steroidse.g., via the Marker degradation
is a method of partial synthesis that is a long-established alternative to microbial
transformation of phytosterols to steroids, and underpinned Syntex efforts using
the Mexican barbasco trade (harvesting and marketing large tubers of wild-growing
plants, e.g., yams) to produce early synthetic steroids. [30]
Research awards[edit]
A number of Nobel Prizes have been awarded for steroid research, including:
1927 (Chemistry) Heinrich Otto Wieland Constitution of bile acids and sterols
and their connection to vitamins[34]
1928 (Chemistry) Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus Constitution of sterols and their
connection to vitamins[35]
1939 (Chemistry) Adolf Butenandt and Leopold Ruzicka Isolation and structural
studies of steroid sex hormones, and related studies on higher terpenes[36]
1969 (Chemistry) Derek Barton and Odd Hassel Development of the concept of
conformation in chemistry, emphasizing the steroid nucleus [39]
See also[edit]
pharmacology portal
Batrachotoxin
Pheromone
Steroid hydroxylases
Steroid sulfatase
References[edit]
1.
^ Jump up to:a b c d G.P. Moss and the Working Party of the IUPAC-IUB
Joint Commission on Biochemical Nomenclature (1989)."Nomenclature of
steroids, recommendations 1989" (PDF). Pure & Appl. Chem. 61 (10): 1783
1822.doi:10.1351/pac198961101783. Also available with the same authors (and
year) at "IUPAC-IUB Joint Commission on Biochemical Nomenclature (JCBN).
The nomenclature of steroids. Recommendations 1989". European Journal of
Biochemistry / FEBS 186 (3): 42958. Dec 1989. doi:10.1111/j.14321033.1989.tb15228.x. PMID 2606099. Note, the article co-authors, the Working
Party of the IUPAC-IUB JCBN, were P. Karlson (chairman), J.R. Bull, K. Engel, J.
Fried, H.W. Kircher, K.L. Loening, G.P. Moss, G. Popjk and M.R.
Uskokovic. Also available online at "The Nomenclature of Steroids". London,
GBR: Queen Mary University of London. p. 3S-1.4. Retrieved 10
May 2014. (See also note 4 therein.)
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