ABSTRACT
Aromatization of testosterone to estradiol by neural tissue has classically been associated with the regulation of sexual differentiation, gonadotropin secretion, and copulatory behavior. However, new data indicate that the capacity for aromatization is not restricted to the endocrine brain and demonstrate roles for locally formed estrogens in neurogenesis and in responses of brain tissue to injury. This article summaries our current understanding of the distribution and regulation of aromatase in the brain and describes the classic and novel roles it plays. A better understanding of brain aromatization could shed new light on its physiologic and pathologic functions and someday lead to new, centrally acting drug therapies.
KEYWORDS
Cytochrome P450 aromatase - CYP19 - LH - sexual behavior - sexual partner preference - brain ischemia
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Charles E RoselliPh.D.
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology L334, Oregon Health & Science University
3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, OR 97201-3098
eMail: rosellic@ohsu.edu