Horm Metab Res 2008; 40(10): 679-684
DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1078718
Original Basic

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Progesterone is Extensively Metabolized in Osteoblasts: Implications for Progesterone Action on Bone

M. Quinkler 1 , K. Kaur 2 , M. Hewison 3 , P. M. Stewart 2 , M. S. Cooper 2
  • 1Clinical Endocrinology, Internal Medicine, Center for Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Endocrinology, Charité Campus Mitte, Charité University Medicine Berlin, Berlin, Germany
  • 2Division of Medical Sciences, University of Birmingham, Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, B15 2TH, UK
  • 3Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Further Information

Publication History

received 30.08.2007

accepted 07.02.2008

Publication Date:
06 June 2008 (online)

Abstract

The effect of progestogens on bone is controversial with some studies suggesting an anabolic action while others show no effect. Prereceptor metabolism via localized expression of specific enzymes may have major impact on progesterone action in bone and may explain some of the discrepancies between studies. We therefore investigated the metabolism of progesterone in primary cultures of human osteoblasts and MG-63 osteoblastic cells. Osteoblasts and MG-63 cells were incubated with 4-14C-progesterone tracer and 50 nM unlabeled progesterone, and magnitude and pattern of progesterone metabolism were determined by two-dimensional thin-layer chromatography. Conventional and Taqman real-time PCR analysis were used to assess expression of progesterone metabolizing enzymes. In both types of cells the two major metabolic products of progesterone were 20 α-dihydroprogesterone and 5 α-dihydroprogesterone, but conversion to 3 α, 5 α- and 3 β, 5 α-tetrahydroprogesterone was also detected. This activity was concomitant with expression of mRNAs for the enzymes AKR1C1, 5 α-reductase type 1 and AKR1C2, and 3 β-HSD type 1 and 3-hydroxysteroid epimerase. In MG-63 cells progesterone metabolism was largely mediated via 5 α-reductase. In primary osteoblasts progesterone metabolism was unaffected by treatment with dexamethasone or estradiol, but in MG-63 cells dexamethasone pretreatment increased 5 α-reductase activity. Progesterone is subject to extensive intracellular inactivation in human osteoblasts, with potential attenuation of local progesterone receptor responses. Conversely, osteoblasts have the capacity to convert progestogens to metabolites reported to have anabolic actions through the estrogen receptor.

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Correspondence

M. QuinklerMD 

Clinical Endocrinology

Internal Medicine

Center for Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Endocrinology

Charité Campus Mitte

Charité University Medicine Berlin

Charitéplatz 1

10117 Berlin

Germany

Phone: +49/30/4505 141 52

Fax: +49/30/4505 149 52

Email: marcus.quinkler@charite.de

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