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Human Reproduction Update, Vol.4, No.4 pp.406-419, 1998
© European Society of Human Reproduction and Embryology 1998; all rights reserved

Central integrative role of oestrogen in the regulation of placental steroidogenic maturation and the development of the fetal pituitary-adrenocortical axis in the baboon

GJ Pepe0 and ED Albrecht1,z

0 Department of Physiology, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, VA 23501, USA 1 Departments of Obstetrics/Gynecology/Reproductive Sciences and Physiology, The Center for Studies in Reproduction, The University of Maryland School of Medicine, Bressler Research Lab, 11-017, 655 W Baltimore St, Baltimore, MD 21210, USA z Corresponding author e-mail: ealbrech@umaryland.edu

Abstract

The purpose of this review is to summarize the experimental data establishing the baboon as a non-human primate model for the study of the endocrinology of human pregnancy, and to outline the results of in-vivo experiments in the baboon which show that oestrogen plays a central integrative role in the regulation of placental steroidogenic maturation as well as the function and maturation of the fetal adrenal gland. Thus, oestrogen regulates the receptor-mediated uptake of low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol and the P450 cholesterol side chain cleavage system within sycytiotrophoblasts to promote the production of progesterone. Oestrogen concomitantly acts on the fetal adrenal gland to modulate the production of androgen precursors which ensures maintenance of physiologic levels of oestrogen during the course of gestation. In addition, oestrogen regulates the 11ß-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase enzymes controlling placental cortisol-cortisone metabolism and their secretion into the fetal circulation and thus indirectly regulates the fetal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis. Collectively, these oestrogen-regulated processes ensure the maintenance of pregnancy and the maturation of the fetus including the development in utero of adrenocortical self-sufficiency essential for neonatal survival.

Key words: adrenal gland/baboon/oestrogen/pituitary/placenta


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