Examples of steroid in the following topics:
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Steroids
- Unlike phospholipids and fats, steroids have a fused ring structure.
- Many steroids also have the –OH functional group, and these steroids are classified as alcohols called sterols.
- Therefore, steroids play very important roles in the body's reproductive system.
- Thus, steroids also play an important role in the structure and function of membranes.
- Steroids, such as cholesterol and cortisol, are composed of four fused hydrocarbon rings.
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Signaling Molecules
- Important members of this class of ligands are the steroid hormones.
- Steroids are lipids that have a hydrocarbon skeleton with four fused rings; different steroids have different functional groups attached to the carbon skeleton.
- Steroid hormones include the female sex hormone, estradiol, which is a type of estrogen; the male sex hormone, testosterone; and cholesterol, which is an important structural component of biological membranes and a precursor of steriod hormones .
- Steroid hormones have similar chemical structures to their precursor, cholesterol.
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Lipid-Derived, Amino Acid-Derived, and Peptide Hormones
- The primary class of lipid hormones in humans is the steroid hormones.
- Examples of steroid hormones include estradiol, which is an estrogen, or female sex hormone, and testosterone, which is an androgen, or male sex hormone.
- Other steroid hormones include aldosterone and cortisol, which are released by the adrenal glands along with some other types of androgens.
- Steroid hormones are insoluble in water; they are carried by transport proteins in blood.
- The structures shown here represent (a) cholesterol, plus the steroid hormones (b) testosterone and (c) estradiol.
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Intracellular Hormone Receptors
- Lipid-derived (soluble) hormones such as steroid hormones diffuse across the lipid bilayer membranes of the endocrine cell.
- The cell signaling pathways induced by the steroid hormones regulate specific genes within the cell's DNA.
- In this way, the steroid hormone regulates specific cell processes .
- Other lipid-soluble hormones that are not steroid hormones, such as vitamin D and thyroxine, have receptors located in the nucleus.
- The hormone-receptor complex stimulates transcription of specific genes in the same way that steroid hormones do.
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Plant Defenses Against Herbivores
- Foxgloves produce several deadly chemicals, namely cardiac and steroidal glycosides.
- Foxgloves produce several deadly chemicals, namely cardiac and steroidal glycosides.
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Connecting Lipids to Glucose Metabolism
- Cholesterol contributes to cell membrane flexibility and is a precursor to steroid hormones.
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The Endoplasmic Reticulum
- Functions of the SER include synthesis of carbohydrates, lipids, and steroid hormones; detoxification of medications and poisons; and storage of calcium ions.
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Zygomycota: The Conjugated Fungi
- The metabolic products of other species of Rhizopus are intermediates in the synthesis of semi-synthetic steroid hormones.
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Pineal Gland and Gonads
- Their main role is the production of steroid hormones.
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Plasma Membrane Hormone Receptors
- Unlike steroid hormones, lipid-insoluble hormones do not directly affect the target cell because they cannot enter the cell and act directly on DNA.