Sex hormone
Sex hormones, also known as sex steroids, gonadocorticoids and gonadal steroids, are steroid hormones that interact with vertebrate steroid hormone receptors. The sex hormones include the androgens, estrogens, and progestogens. Their effects are mediated by slow genomic mechanisms through nuclear receptors as well as by fast nongenomic mechanisms through membrane-associated receptors and signaling cascades. Certain polypeptide hormones including the luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, and gonadotropin-releasing hormone – each associated with the gonadotropin axis – are usually not regarded as sex hormones, although they play major sex-related roles.
Production
Natural sex hormones are made by the gonads, by adrenal glands, or by conversion from other sex steroids in other tissue such as liver or fat.Types
In many contexts, the two main classes of sex hormones are androgens and estrogens, of which the most important human derivatives are testosterone and estradiol, respectively. Other contexts will include progestogens as a third class of sex steroids, distinct from androgens and estrogens. Progesterone is the most important and only naturally occurring human progestogen. In general, androgens are considered "male sex hormones", since they have masculinizing effects, while estrogens and progestogens are considered "female sex hormones", since they have feminizing effects, although all types are present in each sex at different levels.Sex hormones include:
- Progestogens
- * Pregnenolone → Progesterone → Allopregnanedione → Allopregnanolone
- * 17α-Hydroxypregnenolone → 17α-Hydroxyprogesterone
- Androgens
- * Dehydroepiandrosterone → Androstenedione → Androstanedione → Androsterone
- * Androstenediol → Testosterone → Dihydrotestosterone → Androstanediol
- Estrogens
- * 2-Hydroxyestrone ← Estrone → 16α-Hydroxyestrone
- * 2-Hydroxyestradiol ← Estradiol → Estriol → Estetrol
Synthetic sex steroids