Meigs R A
Department of Reproductive Biology, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106.
Life Sci. 1990;46(5):321-7. doi: 10.1016/0024-3205(90)90010-o.
All oxidative functions of aromatase, i.e., estrogen production, 19-oxygenated androgen production and 7-ethoxycoumarin deethylation, were inhibited in parallel in placental microsomes from non-smokers by the mechanism-based, time-dependent inactivators (suicide substrates) 10 beta-(2-propynyl)estr-4-ene-3,17-dione and 4-hydroxyandrost-4-ene-3,17-dione. In contrast, the aromatase suicide substrate androst-4-ene-3,6,17-trione had little or no effect on the conversion of androst-4-ene-3,17-dione to 19-hydroxyandrost-4-ene-3,17-dione or on the conversion of the latter to 3,17-dioxoandrost-4-en-19-al while severely limiting the capacity for estrogen production from androst-4-ene-3,17-dione and 19-hydroxyandrost-4-ene-3,17-dione in such microsomal preparations. Androst-4-ene-3,6,17-trione, therefore, appears to uncouple the 19-hydroxylation of androgens from estrogen synthesis. This agent also produced only a minimal inhibition of 7-ethoxycoumarin deethylation, indicating that this major constitutive transformation of a xenobiotic chemical is associated with the steroid 19-hydroxylating function of the aromatase system.