Loss of progesterone signaling in the endometrium may be a causal factor in the development of endometriosis, and progesterone resistance is commonly observed in women with this disease. In endometriotic stromal cells, the levels of progesterone receptor (PR), particularly the PR-B isoform, are significantly decreased, leading to a loss of paracrine signaling. PR deficiency likely underlies the development of progesterone resistance in women with endometriosis who no longer respond to progestin therapy. Here we review the complex epigenetic and transcriptional mechanisms leading to PR deficiency. The initial event may involve deficient methylation of the estrogen receptor (ER)β promoter resulting in pathologic overexpression of ERβ in endometriotic stromal cells. We speculate that alterations in the relative levels of ERβ and ERα in endometrial tissue dictate E2-regulated PR expression, such that a decreased ERα--ERβ ratio may result in suppression of PR. In this review, we propose a molecular model that may be responsible for changes in ERβ and ERα leading to PR loss and progesterone resistance in endometriosis.
Adding metformin to the OC treatment may improve the insulin sensitivity, and may further suppress the hyperandrogenaemia in non-obese women with PCOS.
Endometriotic cells contain the full complement of steroidogenic genes for de novo synthesis of estradiol from cholesterol, which is stimulated by PGE2 via enhanced binding of SF1 to promoters of StAR and aromatase genes in a synchronous fashion.
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