Author:
Thiebaud Daniel,Secrest Roberta J.
Abstract
Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) are a diverse group of
compounds that bind with specific, high-affinity binding to the estrogen
receptor (ER). Depending on the tissue, SERMs can act as either ER agonists or
antagonists. Recent advances in ER biology have provided insight into possible
mechanisms by which SERMs elicit these tissue-specific estrogen agonist and
estrogen antagonist activities. The estrogen response pathway has been shown
to differ among target tissues depending on various tissue and cellular
factors, such as the ER subtype, the structure of the bound
receptor–ligand complex, and the tissue-specific cellular
transcriptional machinery. Clinically available SERMs include clomiphene,
tamoxifen and toremifene, which are triphenylethylenes, and raloxifene, a
benzothiophene. Raloxifene has estrogen agonist effects on bone, serum lipids,
and arterial vasculature, and estrogen antagonist effects in breast and
uterus. Clinical trial data for raloxifene is used to illustrate some of the
mechanisms by which SERMs exert their tissue-specific estrogen agonist and
estrogen antagonist effects. The complex pharmacology surrounding the tissue
selectivity of SERMs is discussed.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
20 articles.
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