Divergent Evolution of Progesterone and Mineralocorticoid Receptors in Terrestrial Vertebrates and Fish Influences Endocrine Disruption
Michael E. Baker

TL;DR
This paper explores how the evolution of progesterone and mineralocorticoid receptors in fish and terrestrial vertebrates has influenced their responses to steroids, impacting endocrine disruption mechanisms across species.
Contribution
It reveals the divergent evolution of PR and MR receptors, showing how their steroid responsiveness changed after the divergence of fish and terrestrial vertebrates.
Findings
PR in elephant shark responds to progesterone and 17,20dihydroxyprogesterone
Terrestrial vertebrate PR evolved to respond mainly to progesterone
Ray-finned fish PR responds weakly to progesterone and strongly to 17,20dihydroxyprogesterone
Abstract
There is much concern about disruption of endocrine physiology regulated by steroid hormones in humans, other terrestrial vertebrates and fish by industrial chemicals, such as bisphenol A, and pesticides, such as DDT. These endocrine-disrupting chemicals influence steroid-mediated physiology in humans and other vertebrates by competing with steroids for receptor binding sites, disrupting diverse responses involved in reproduction, development and differentiation. Here I discuss that due to evolution of the progesterone receptor (PR) and mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) after ray-finned fish and terrestrial vertebrates diverged from a common ancestor, each receptor evolved to respond to different steroids in ray-finned fish and terrestrial vertebrates. In elephant shark, a cartilaginous fish, ancestral to ray-finned fish and terrestrial vertebrates, both progesterone and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReproductive biology and impacts on aquatic species · Genetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal Abnormalities · Physiological and biochemical adaptations
