The pregnanolone isomers (PI) allopregnanolone (3alpha-hydroxy-5alpha-pregnan-20-one), pregnanolone (3alpha-hydroxy-5beta-pregnan-20-one), isopregnanolone (3beta-hydroxy-5alpha-pregnan-20-one), epipregnanolone (3beta-hydroxy-5beta-pregnan-20-one), progesterone, and estradiol were measured in 138 pregnant women. The sampling was carried out from the first through the 10th month of pregnancy. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis and RIA were used for the measurement of steroid levels. The ratios of individual PI were similar to those found previously around parturition: about 25:10:7:1 for allopregnanolone, pregnanolone, isopregnanolone, and epipregnanolone, respectively. All the PI showed a significant increase during pregnancy, which was more pronounced in the 3alpha-steroids. The results indicated changing ratios between 3alpha- and 3beta-PI and between 5alpha- and 5beta-PI throughout pregnancy. The constant allopregnanolone/isopregnanolone ratio found through pregnancy weakened the hypothesis of the role of isopregnanolone in the onset of parturition. The ratio of estradiol (stimulating uterine activity) to 5alpha-PI and epipregnanolone exhibited significant changes during pregnancy in favor of estradiol up to the sixth or seventh month, in contrast to the constant estradiol/pregnanolone ratio. A pregnancy-stabilizing role of pregnanolone, counterbalancing the stimulating effect of estradiol on the onset of parturition, was suggested.
Steroid profiling helps various pathologies to be rapidly diagnosed. Results from analyses investigating steroidogenic pathways may be used as a tool for uncovering pathology causations and proposals of new therapeutic approaches. The purpose of this study was to address still underutilized application of the advanced GC-MS/MS platform for the multicomponent quantification of endogenous steroids. We developed and validated a GC-MS/MS method for the quantification of 58 unconjugated steroids and 42 polar conjugates of steroids (after hydrolysis) in human blood. The present method was validated not only for blood of men and non-pregnant women but also for blood of pregnant women and for mixed umbilical cord blood. The spectrum of analytes includes common hormones operating via nuclear receptors as well as other bioactive substances like immunomodulatory and neuroactive steroids. Our present results are comparable with those from our previously published GC-MS method as well as the results of others. The present method was extended for corticoids and 17α-hydroxylated 5α/β-reduced pregnanes, which are useful for the investigation of alternative "backdoor" pathway. When comparing the analytical characteristics of the present and previous method, the first exhibit by far higher selectivity, and generally higher sensitivity and better precision particularly for 17α-hydroxysteroids.
Key wordsSteroid metabolome • Human blood • Gas chromatographytandem mass spectrometry • Backdoor pathway • Pregnancy •
Mixed umbilical cord blood
Methods
SamplesSerum samples from non-pregnant subjects were collected from the employees of the Institute of Endocrinology, Prague, Czech Republic and their relatives, as well as from patients of the Institute of Endocrinology. Serum samples from pregnant women and umbilical cord serum at birth were obtained from patients
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.