Wise P M, Dubal D B, Wilson M E, Rau S W, Böttner M
Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40536, USA.
Endocrinology. 2001 Mar;142(3):969-73. doi: 10.1210/endo.142.3.8033.
An accumulating body of evidence clearly establishes that estradiol is a potent neuroprotective and neurotrophic factor in the adult: it influences memory and cognition, decreases the risk and delays the onset of neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, and attenuates the extent of cell death that results from brain injuries such as cerebrovascular stroke and neurotrauma. Thus, estradiol appears to act at two levels: 1) it decreases the risk of disease or injury; and/or 2) it decreases the extent of injury incurred by suppressing the neurotoxic stimulus itself or increasing the resilience of the brain to a given injury. During the past century, the average life span of women has increased dramatically, whereas the time of the menopause has remained essentially constant. Thus, more women will live a larger fraction of their lives in a postmenopausal, hypoestrogenic state than ever before. Clearly, it is critical for us understand the circumstances under which estradiol exerts protective actions and the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie these novel, nonreproductive actions.
越来越多的证据清楚地表明,雌二醇在成年人中是一种强大的神经保护和神经营养因子:它影响记忆和认知,降低患神经疾病如阿尔茨海默病的风险并延迟其发病,减轻诸如脑血管中风和神经创伤等脑损伤导致的细胞死亡程度。因此,雌二醇似乎在两个层面发挥作用:1)它降低疾病或损伤的风险;和/或2)它通过抑制神经毒性刺激本身或增强大脑对特定损伤的恢复力来减轻损伤程度。在过去的一个世纪里,女性的平均寿命大幅增加,而绝经时间基本保持不变。因此,与以往相比,更多女性将在绝经后、雌激素水平低下的状态下度过更长的生命阶段。显然,对我们来说,了解雌二醇发挥保护作用的情况以及这些新的非生殖作用背后的细胞和分子机制至关重要。