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Published in: Breast Cancer Research 6/2005

01-12-2005 | Viewpoint

What does an orphan G-protein-coupled receptor have to do with estrogen?

Authors: James M Rae, Michael D Johnson

Published in: Breast Cancer Research | Issue 6/2005

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Abstract

Estrogen affects multiple aspects of human physiology, including the normal growth and development of female reproductive tissues, bone integrity, cardiovascular and central nervous system functions, and plays a central role in normal mammary development and breast pathogenesis. It modulates diverse cell signaling pathways, some of which appear to be independent of the known estrogen receptors (ERs). Although many of estrogen's actions can be explained by the nuclear ERs (ER-α and ER-β) functioning as ligand-activated RNA transcription factors, there are numerous rapid biochemical and physiological responses that cannot be explained by the classical genomic effects of estrogen signaling. It has long been postulated that the rapid effects of estrogen are due to a membrane-bound ER, and two recent reports suggest that it is in fact a G-protein-coupled receptor named 'GPR30'.
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Metadata
Title
What does an orphan G-protein-coupled receptor have to do with estrogen?
Authors
James M Rae
Michael D Johnson
Publication date
01-12-2005
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Breast Cancer Research / Issue 6/2005
Electronic ISSN: 1465-542X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/bcr1330

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