AI Article Synopsis

  • Progesterone hormone plays a vital role in regulating the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, and childbirth through various receptors and signaling pathways in the female reproductive system.
  • It acts through classical nuclear receptors for longer-lasting effects and non-classical membrane receptors for quicker responses, which can impact both cellular and genomic functions.
  • The review discusses the significance of these progesterone receptors in reproductive tissues, highlighting their importance in understanding and addressing female infertility.

Article Abstract

The progesterone hormone regulates the human menstrual cycle, pregnancy, and parturition by its action via the different progesterone receptors and signaling pathways in the female reproductive tract. Progesterone actions can be exerted through classical and non-classical receptors, or even a combination of both. The former are nuclear receptors whose activation leads to transcriptional activity regulation and thus in turn leads to slower but long-lasting responses. The latter are composed of progesterone receptors membrane components (PGRMC) and membrane progestin receptors (mPRs). These receptors rapidly activate the appropriate intracellular signal transduction pathways, and they can subsequently initiate specific cell responses or even modulate genomic cell responses. This review covers our current knowledge on the mechanisms of action and the relevance of classical and non-classical progesterone receptors in female reproductive tissues ranging from the ovary and uterus to the cervix, and it exposes their crucial role in female infertility.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8538361PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms222011278DOI Listing

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