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Too much Estrogen or not enough Testosterone causes us to be fat?

heavyiron

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I have heard over and over that Estrogen is responsible for female fat pattern distribution but I have had a hard time proving it over the years. In fact there is evidence to the contrary. Are we limiting our exposure to Estrogen when we should be more concerned with increasing our Testosterone for fat loss? The following article intrigued me years ago and I would like to share it for any of those who have never read it before. This article brings to light the need to focus on balancing our hormones in concert. Estrogen, Testosterone and HGH all exert lipolysis according to the author. His theory that progesterone dominance may cause fat storage is quite interesting since Estrogen has received much of the blame from the bodybuilding community over the years.

Obviously nutrition and training drive fat loss but this understanding of how hormones effect fat storage or burning will help us become more efficient at reaching our goals.

Contrarian Endocrinology Revisited: Estrogen for Men?

10/07/2005

by:
Karl Hoffman


Estrogen has been reported to confer a number of health benefits in both males and females, such as the well described effects of increasing bone mass density. Here I want to examine some aspects of estrogen that may be of more immediate interest to bodybuilders and athletes. These include the lipolytic (fat mobilizing) and fat oxidizing properties of estrogen, as well as its anorectic (appetite suppressing) effect. Finally we will look at an emerging area of research: the relative contributions of the various metabolites of estrogen to the overall effects of the parent steroid.

Estrogen as a Lipolytic Hormone

Are male (and many female) bodybuilders misguided in their attempts to limit their exposure to estrogen? After all, it makes a person fat doesn’t it? And cause gynecomastia? Well, certainly for men using anabolic steroids that aromatize, too much estrogen can lead to gynecomastia in susceptible individuals. But what about those of us not using steroids? Should we treat estrogen as our fat producing enemy and even go so far as to attempt to prevent its production by using aromatase inhibitors? Or block its action at the estrogen receptor with agents like tamoxifen?

In fact, there are a wealth of data that implicate estrogen as both an anorectic and antiadipogenic hormone. It is much more likely that progesterone is the culprit in supporting higher levels of gluteofemoral fat that is prominent in women (men tend to store more fat in the abdominal area) (1). The model described in (1) has progesterone as the lipogenic hormone. Before menopause, both estrodiol and progesterone are secreted by the ovaries. After menopause, estrone becomes the primary circulating estrogen produced from aromatization of adrenal androgens (primarily the aromatization of androstenedione to estrone by adipose tissue), while progesterone levels drop dramatically since adrenal production of progesterone is minimal.

In premenopausal women progesterone increases lipoprotein lipase activity, which is greater in the gluteofemoral region, while estrogen suppresses it. Lipoprotein lipase is the body’s primary fat storage enzyme; it is responsible for allowing fats to leave the circulation and enter adipocytes. The progesterone wins out though and before menopause, women tend to have more gluteofemoral fat and less abdominal fat.

From an adaptational viewpoint, it has been argued that women's fat is designed to be stored until needed for lactation and child rearing. Men's is designed to be readily mobilized for fight or flight situations during defense and hunting. This theory may be a bit simplistic as well as sexist; but it does make sense to some degree.

Most likely the notion of estrogenic fat originated from the belief that estrogen upregulates alpha 2 receptors in fat cells, retarding lipolysis. This may be just one facet of estrogen’s actions. If one looks at the net result of estrogen’s effects, to quote a leading expert in the field “Testosterone and GH inhibit LPL and stimulate lipolysis markedly. Oestrogens seem to exert net effects similar to those of testosterone.” (2)

For example, animal studies have shown that testosterone and the nonaromatizing DHT promote alpha 2 adrenoreceptor mediated antilipolytic activity, just as they promote beta adrenoreceptor mediated lipolysis (25).

Interestingly, recent research has even attributed at least part of testosterone's fat burning properties to its local aromatization to estradiol (3). For example when testosterone is administered along with an aromatase inhibitor, LPL activity has been shown to increase (4). This suggests that the aromatization of testosterone to estradiol is responsible for the noted ability of testosterone to inhibit LPL.

There are a number of animal studies where estradiol administration led to significant weight and fat loss. Citing just one, for example

The administration of 17 beta-estradiol (500 micrograms/kg, 2 or 4 weeks) to male rats significantly reduced the body weight...Basal lipolysis and adrenaline-induced lipolysis [due to increase in HSL action] were also significantly enhanced in the epididymal adipose tissue from the male rat treated either with 7 mg/kg estradiol 12 h ahead or with 500 micrograms/kg estradiol for 2 weeks. These results indicate that estradiol exerts strong effects on metabolism of the adipose and these effects seems to be mediated through cyclic-AMP. (5)

This research indicates that in addition to the abovementioned inhibition of LPL, estrogen also stimulates the lipolytic enzyme hormone sensitive lipase.

Some of the most compelling evidence for the antiadipogenic effect of estrogen in both males and females comes from studies of estrogen receptor knockout mice and humans with aromatase deficiency. Both the afflicted humans and the knockout mice exhibit obesity. A detailed look at this topic can be found in a study of estrogen receptor knockout mice (6) Quoting from that study,

The one known human male lacking ER had a body weight approximately 2 SD greater than normal. However, this individual also had increased height because of a lack of epiphysial plate fusion. Thus, continued growth may mitigate potential increases in WAT that might normally occur because of a lack of ER. However, men and women lacking aromatase manifest truncal obesity. This and the insulin resistance and impaired glucose tolerance observed in both humans lacking ER or aromatase and their murine counterparts emphasize that similar effects accompany loss of ER in both species and strongly suggest ER may regulate adipose tissue in men.

Estrogen as an Anorectic Hormone

I also mentioned that estrogen is a potent anorectic, hunger-suppressing hormone. This effect is thought to be due to an estrogen-induced inhibition in melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) signaling (7). MCH is a neuropeptide found in the hypothalamus that is also thought to be involved in leptin’s regulation of appetite. Leptin, an anorectic hormone secreted from adipose tissue, acts on the specific receptor present on its target neurons in the brain, and suppresses the expression of both MCH and its receptor. So we see that the actions of both estrogen and leptin are at least partly mediated through interactions with MCH. In rats and mice, intracerebroventricular administration of MCH induces hyperphagia, whereas MCH deficiency induced by targeted gene deletion leads to a hypophagia syndrome and loss of body fat.

Under normal conditions, restricted food availability leads to a drop in leptin. Falling leptin levels in turn elevate Neuropeptide Y (NPY), a hunger inducing peptide, and decrease expression of pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC), the precursor of the anorexic melanocortin -MSH, a hunger suppressing hormone. Both these changes result in elevated MHC, and food seeking behavior is initiated. When high levels of estrogen are present, the normal food seeking brought on by the changes in NPY, POMC, and MHC described above is blocked, as depicted in the diagram below, adapted from (7)

Figure 1. Proposed model of the effects of estrogen on hypothalamic neuronal pathways involved in the regulation of energy balance. A, In response to energy restriction, circulating leptin and insulin levels decrease, resulting in increased gene expression of orexigenic peptides (e.g., NPY) and decreased gene expression of anorexic peptides (e.g., POMC) in neurons of the ARC. These neuronal responses are proposed to increase expression of the orexigenic neuropeptide MCH in neurons of the LHA, which in turn promote increased food intake. B, Estrogen-mediated weight loss and anorexia also lower plasma leptin and insulin, but the expected activation of MCH neurons fails to occur in the presence of estrogen, despite the preservation of "upstream" ARC NPY and POMC neuronal responses to reduced adiposity signaling. This inhibition of MCH neurons by estrogen is hypothesized to contribute to the sustained anorexia observed with chronic estrogen exposure in male rodents. Adapted from Mystkowski et.al. J Neurosci. 2000 Nov 15;20(22):8637-42.

Estrogen Promotes Fat Burning During Exercise

For ethical reasons, the bulk of the research described was carried out in females and male animals. However, one recent study looked at the effects of estrogen administration on energy expenditure in exercising men (8). In this study male subjects cycled for 90 min at an intensity of 65% VO2max following eight days of either estrogen supplementation (2 mg 17beta-estradiol/day) or placebo. Estrogen supplementation significantly decreased carbohydrate oxidation by 5-16% and leucine oxidation by 16% (indicating a sparing effect on glycogen and muscle) whereas it significantly increased lipid oxidation by 22-44% at rest and during exercise. The authors concluded that estrogen influences fuel source selection at rest and during endurance exercise in men characterized by a reduced dependence on amino acids and carbohydrate and an increased reliance on lipids as a fuel source.

The administered dose of estrogen in (8) resulted in an increase in plasma estradiol from a baseline of 125 pM/L to 876 pM/L.

The authors suggest that the change in substrate use during exercise caused by estrogen may result for estrogen related stimulation of beta and possibly alpha adrenergic receptors. I see a problem with this hypothesis, however, since research has shown that beta receptor stimulation during exercise actually has the opposite effect, sparing fat at the expense of glycogen oxidation (9). Whatever the underlying mechanism is, estrogen clearly promotes fat burning in men.

Studies Involving Male to Female Transsexuals

Studies where hormonal treatment was administered to male to female transsexuals are often cited as evidence that estrogen administration to men leads to accumulation of subcutaneous fat.

These studies are typically confounded by the co-administration of progestational antiandrogens along with estradiol (24). The observed increase in subcutaneous fat in these subjects could very well be due to the progestational antiandrogens and the resulting drop in testosterone, which itself is a lipolytic hormone in subcutaneous adipose tissue.

All Estrogens are Not Created Equal

So far we have dwelt on the effects of estrogen itself. However, considerable work has shown that the major metabolites of estradiol and estrone are those hydroxylated (possess an OH group) at either the C-2 or the C-16alpha positions, although forms hydroxylated at the C-4 and C-15alpha are present, but in relatively lesser amounts. There exists a complete divergence in the biological properties of the 2- and 16alpha-hydroxylated metabolites of estradiol. 2-hydroxyestrone (2-OHE1) has been found to exert a modest anti-estrogenic effect in some tissues (10) and is popularly called the “good estrogen”. Studies on its ability to alter Lutienizing Hormone (LH) have yielded variable results, with some studies showing it increases LH production while others report either no change or a slight drop in LH with large doses of 2-OHE1.16alpha-hydroxyestrone on the other is a potent estrogen (11). In addition, it is associated with various cancers and has been shown to be a mutagen (cancer promoting agent).

Figure 2. Pathways of Estradiol metabolism, showing the so-called “good” metabolite 2-hydroxyestrone and the “bad” metabolite 16alpha-hydroxyestrone.

Figure 3. Schematic illustration of the metabolic pathway depicted in figure 2 showing additional estrogenic metabolites affected by DIM.

Phytochemicals such as indole-3-carbinol (I3C) are components of cruciferous vegetables, which exhibit antitumor activity associated with altered carcinogen metabolism and detoxification. The compound 3,3'-diindolylmethane, (DIM), is a major metabolite of I3C now available in supplement form. DIM directs estrogen metabolism away from “bad” estrogen to the good 2-hydroxyestrone/estradiol metabolites. Moreover, DIM itself exhibits antiestrogenic properties according to some researchers, and estrogenic activity according to others, much as if it were a SERM (12, 24). Among the hypothesized mechanisms of chemoprevention by I3C and DIM is their ability to induce a number of phase I enzymes in liver and colon, including cytochrome P450 (CYP) 1A1, CYP1A2, and CYP 3A. Increased activity of phase I drug-metabolizing enzymes can protect against some carcinogens by increasing their rate of oxidative metabolism to less toxic metabolites.

So by taking supplements containing 3,3'-diindolylmethane we can possibly lessen the likelihood of developing prostate and possibly other cancers, since research has shown that 3,3'-diindolylmethane has direct anticancer effects on the prostate independent of its ability to suppress “bad” estrogen (13). However, at least part of the ability of DIM to help prevent prostate cancer may lie is its antiandrogenic as well as antiestrogenic properties. Studies using prostate cancer (LNCaP) cells show that at physiologically obtainable levels DIM acts as a pure androgen antagonist that blocks expression of androgen-responsive genes and inhibits AR nuclear translocation (14).

One theory is that DIM appears to exert its antiestrogenic/antiandrogenic properties by acting as a weak agonist at the so-called aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) (15). The AhR has been extensively studied due to the fact that a number of environmental toxins such as 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) exert their effects by acting as strong agonists of the AhR. Dioxins are well known to disrupt reproductive activity in animals by deranging gonadal, pituitary, and CNS function. TCDD, like DIM acts as an antiestrogen in numerous tissues. At least part of TCDD’s antiestrogenic activity results from activation of proteosomes that degrade the estrogen receptor (16).

It’s intriguing to speculate whether DIM might also be capable of ER degradation in the pituitary, which we noted possesses AhR receptors and is sensitive to TCDD. If so, DIM might block estrogen related negative feedback on the HPTA. Yet another theory on DIM action proposes that in some tissues it activates the estrogen receptor independently of the presence of estrogen by activating the so-called PKA- and MAPK signaling systems (22).

As noted above, some studies show 2-hydroxyestrone has no suppressive effect on the HPTA while other research shows either suppression or enhancement. Another metabolite of estradiol, depicted in figure 3, is 2-hydroxyestradiol. Animal experiments have shown that administration of 2-hydroxyestradiol can override the suppressive effect of estradiol on pituitary LH secretion in males (17). The same study showed that the bad estrogen 4-hyroxyestradiol was able to suppress LH production
As can be seen in figures 3 and 4, both 2-hydroxyestradiol and 2-hydroxyestrone are methylated during their metabolism by the body. Interestingly, 2-methoxyestradiol (2-MeOE2) has a significantly higher affinity for Sex Hormone Binding Globulin than do estradiol and even testosterone (18). This is significant in that 2-MeOE2, by virtue of its higher affinity for SHBG than testosterone, can displace testosterone from SHBG, possibly enlarging the fraction of free, or bioactive testosterone.

16alpha-hydroxyestrone may play a role in a number of diseases other than cancers. For example, the estrogen found in the synovial fluid of rheumatoid arthritis patients is primarily the proinflammatory 16alpha-hydroxyestrone and may be responsible for the inflammation associated with that disease (19, 20). DIM may prove useful in treating or ameliorating the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis and other estrogen related autoimmune diseases that primarily affect women. Also of interest is the observation that while estradiol has well-known neuroprotective actions, 2-hydroxy-estradiol appears to be significantly more neuroprotective than its parent, estradiol (21). Of course, standard medical protocols should be followed and a physician’s advice obtained, before self-medicating with DIM to treat any disease.

Since some evidence suggests DIM might generate estrogen metabolites that suppress LH production, it might not be advisable to use DIM as the sole agent during Post Cycle Therapy. When used post cycle with a SERM such as Clomid that stimulates the HPTA, DIM could offer a number of potential health advantages by shunting estrogen metabolites towards the more healthful 2-OH series while at the same time elevating free testosterone levels. Similarly, during a cycle of aromatizable steroids, when estrogen is high and the HPTA is suppressed, DIM use may offer a number of health benefits due to its actions described above.

For a person not using anabolics and unconcerned about the complexities of Post Cycle Therapy, DIM use may confer enough health benefits, such as possible cancer prevention, to warrant its use as a supplement. And, as mentioned above, we may get a boost in free testosterone as well. Long term safety studies in animals have failed to detect any toxicity due to DIM (23).

In summary, while certainly not advocating estrogen supplementation for men, I also believe it is not the evil hormone it is often made out to be. We should accept it for what it is, a naturally occurring part of or normal hormonal milieu, that can be manipulated in form and quantity to better suit the needs of male athletes and bodybuilders by focusing on altering the byproducts of estrogen metabolism.

References

1) Price TM, O'Brien SN, Welter BH, George R, Anandjiwala J, Kilgore M. Am J Obstet Gynecol 1998 Jan;178(1 Pt 1):101-7
2) Bjorntorp P. Hum Reprod 1997 Oct;12 Suppl 1:21-5
3) Ramirez ME, McMurry MP, Wiebke GA, Felten KJ, Ren K, Meikle AW, Iverius PH Metabolism 1997 Feb;46(2):179-85
4) Zmuda JM, Fahrenbach MC, Younkin BT, Bausserman LL, Terry RB, Catlin DH, Thompson PD. Metabolism 1993 Apr;42(4):446-50
5) Tomita T, Yonekura I, Okada T, Hayashi E Horm Metab Res 1984 Oct;16(10):525-8
6) Heine PA, Taylor JA, Iwamoto GA, Lubahn DB, Cooke PS. Increased adipose tissue in male and female estrogen receptor-alpha knockout mice. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2000 Nov 7;97(23):12729-34
7) Mystkowski P, Seeley RJ, Hahn TM, Baskin DG, Havel PJ, Matsumoto AM, Wilkinson CW, Peacock-Kinzig K, Blake KA, Schwartz MW. J Neurosci 2000 Nov 15;20(22):8637-42
8) Hamadeh MJ, Devries MC, Tarnopolsky MA. Estrogen supplementation reduces whole body leucine and carbohydrate oxidation and increases lipid oxidation in men during endurance exercise. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2005 Mar 8
9) Mora-Rodriguez R, Hodgkinson BJ, Byerley LO, Coyle EF. Effects of beta-adrenergic receptor stimulation and blockade on substrate metabolism during submaximal exercise. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2001 May;280(5):E752-60.
10) Schneider J, Huh MM, Bradlow HL, Fishman J. Antiestrogen action of 2-hydroxyestrone on MCF-7 human breast cancer cells. J Biol Chem. 1984 Apr 25;259(8):4840-5
11) Dalessandri KM, Firestone GL, Fitch MD, Bradlow HL, Bjeldanes LF. Pilot study: effect of 3,3'-diindolylmethane supplements on urinary hormone metabolites in postmenopausal women with a history of early-stage breast cancer. Nutr Cancer. 2004;50(2):161-7.
12) Chen I, McDougal A, Wang F, Safe S. Aryl hydrocarbon receptor-mediated antiestrogenic and antitumorigenic activity of diindolylmethane. Carcinogenesis. 1998 Sep;19(9):1631-9.
13) Sarkar FH, Li Y. Indole-3-carbinol and prostate cancer. J Nutr. 2004 Dec;134(12 Suppl):3493S-3498S.
14) Le HT, Schaldach CM, Firestone GL, Bjeldanes LF. Plant-derived 3,3'-Diindolylmethane is a strong androgen antagonist in human prostate cancer cells. J Biol Chem. 2003 Jun 6;278(23):21136-45.
15) Chen I, McDougal A, Wang F, Safe S. Aryl hydrocarbon receptor-mediated antiestrogenic and antitumorigenic activity of diindolylmethane. Carcinogenesis. 1998 Sep;19(9):1631-9.
16) Wormke M, Stoner M, Saville B, Walker K, Abdelrahim M, Burghardt R, Safe S. The aryl hydrocarbon receptor mediates degradation of estrogen receptor alpha through activation of proteasomes. Mol Cell Biol. 2003 Mar;23(6):1843-55.
17) Franks S, MacLusky NJ, Naish SJ, Naftolin F. Actions of catechol oestrogens on concentrations of serum luteinizing hormone in the adult castrated rat: various effects of 4-hydroxyoestradiol and 2-hydroxyoestradiol. J Endocrinol. 1981 May;89(2):289-95.
18) Avvakumov GV, Grishkovskaya I, Muller YA, Hammond GL. Crystal structure of human sex hormone-binding globulin in complex with 2-methoxyestradiol reveals the molecular basis for high affinity interactions with C-2 derivatives of estradiol. J Biol Chem. 2002 Nov 22;277(47):45219-25
19) Cutolo M, Sulli A, Capellino S, Villaggio B, Montagna P, Seriolo B, Straub RH Sex hormones influence on the immune system: basic and clinical aspects in autoimmunity. Lupus. 2004;13(9):635-8.
20) Cutolo M, Villaggio B, Seriolo B, Montagna P, Capellino S, Straub RH, Sulli A. Synovial fluid estrogens in rheumatoid arthritis. Autoimmun Rev. 2004 Mar;3(3):193-8.
21) Teepker M, Anthes N, Krieg JC, Vedder H 2-OH-estradiol, an endogenous hormone with neuroprotective functions. J Psychiatr Res. 2003 Nov-Dec;37(6):517-23.
22) Leong H, Riby JE, Firestone GL, Bjeldanes LF. Potent ligand-independent estrogen receptor activation by 3,3'-diindolylmethane is mediated by cross talk between the protein kinase A and mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling pathways. Mol Endocrinol. 2004 Feb;18(2):291-302.
23) Leibelt DA, Hedstrom OR, Fischer KA, Pereira CB, Williams DE. Evaluation of chronic dietary exposure to indole-3-carbinol and absorption-enhanced 3,3'-diindolylmethane in sprague-dawley rats. Toxicol Sci. 2003 Jul;74(1):10-21
24) Elbers JM, Asscheman H, Seidell JC, Gooren LJ. Effects of sex steroid hormones on regional fat depots as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging in transsexuals. Am J Physiol. 1999 Feb;276(2 Pt 1):E317-25.
25) Bouloumie A, Valet P, Dauzats M, Lafontan M, Saulnier-Blache JS. In vivo upregulation of adipocyte alpha 2-adrenoceptors by androgens is consequence of direct action on fat cells. Am J Physiol. 1994 Oct;267(4 Pt 1):C926-31.
 
I have heard over and over that Estrogen is responsible for female fat pattern distribution but I have had a hard time proving it over the years. In fact there is evidence to the contrary. Are we limiting our exposure to Estrogen when we should be more concerned with increasing our Testosterone for fat loss? The following article intrigued me years ago and I would like to share it for any of those who have never read it before. This article brings to light the need to focus on balancing our hormones in concert. Estrogen, Testosterone and HGH all exert lipolysis according to the author. His theory that progesterone dominance may cause fat storage is quite interesting since Estrogen has received much of the blame from the bodybuilding community over the years.

Obviously nutrition and training drive fat loss but this understanding of how hormones effect fat storage or burning will help us become more efficient at reaching our goals.

Contrarian Endocrinology Revisited: Estrogen for Men?

10/07/2005

by:
Karl Hoffman


Estrogen has been reported to confer a number of health benefits in both males and females, such as the well described effects of increasing bone mass density. Here I want to examine some aspects of estrogen that may be of more immediate interest to bodybuilders and athletes. These include the lipolytic (fat mobilizing) and fat oxidizing properties of estrogen, as well as its anorectic (appetite suppressing) effect. Finally we will look at an emerging area of research: the relative contributions of the various metabolites of estrogen to the overall effects of the parent steroid.

Estrogen as a Lipolytic Hormone

Are male (and many female) bodybuilders misguided in their attempts to limit their exposure to estrogen? After all, it makes a person fat doesn’t it? And cause gynecomastia? Well, certainly for men using anabolic steroids that aromatize, too much estrogen can lead to gynecomastia in susceptible individuals. But what about those of us not using steroids? Should we treat estrogen as our fat producing enemy and even go so far as to attempt to prevent its production by using aromatase inhibitors? Or block its action at the estrogen receptor with agents like tamoxifen?

In fact, there are a wealth of data that implicate estrogen as both an anorectic and antiadipogenic hormone. It is much more likely that progesterone is the culprit in supporting higher levels of gluteofemoral fat that is prominent in women (men tend to store more fat in the abdominal area) (1). The model described in (1) has progesterone as the lipogenic hormone. Before menopause, both estrodiol and progesterone are secreted by the ovaries. After menopause, estrone becomes the primary circulating estrogen produced from aromatization of adrenal androgens (primarily the aromatization of androstenedione to estrone by adipose tissue), while progesterone levels drop dramatically since adrenal production of progesterone is minimal.

In premenopausal women progesterone increases lipoprotein lipase activity, which is greater in the gluteofemoral region, while estrogen suppresses it. Lipoprotein lipase is the body’s primary fat storage enzyme; it is responsible for allowing fats to leave the circulation and enter adipocytes. The progesterone wins out though and before menopause, women tend to have more gluteofemoral fat and less abdominal fat.

From an adaptational viewpoint, it has been argued that women's fat is designed to be stored until needed for lactation and child rearing. Men's is designed to be readily mobilized for fight or flight situations during defense and hunting. This theory may be a bit simplistic as well as sexist; but it does make sense to some degree.

Most likely the notion of estrogenic fat originated from the belief that estrogen upregulates alpha 2 receptors in fat cells, retarding lipolysis. This may be just one facet of estrogen’s actions. If one looks at the net result of estrogen’s effects, to quote a leading expert in the field “Testosterone and GH inhibit LPL and stimulate lipolysis markedly. Oestrogens seem to exert net effects similar to those of testosterone.” (2)

For example, animal studies have shown that testosterone and the nonaromatizing DHT promote alpha 2 adrenoreceptor mediated antilipolytic activity, just as they promote beta adrenoreceptor mediated lipolysis (25).

Interestingly, recent research has even attributed at least part of testosterone's fat burning properties to its local aromatization to estradiol (3). For example when testosterone is administered along with an aromatase inhibitor, LPL activity has been shown to increase (4). This suggests that the aromatization of testosterone to estradiol is responsible for the noted ability of testosterone to inhibit LPL.

There are a number of animal studies where estradiol administration led to significant weight and fat loss. Citing just one, for example

The administration of 17 beta-estradiol (500 micrograms/kg, 2 or 4 weeks) to male rats significantly reduced the body weight...Basal lipolysis and adrenaline-induced lipolysis [due to increase in HSL action] were also significantly enhanced in the epididymal adipose tissue from the male rat treated either with 7 mg/kg estradiol 12 h ahead or with 500 micrograms/kg estradiol for 2 weeks. These results indicate that estradiol exerts strong effects on metabolism of the adipose and these effects seems to be mediated through cyclic-AMP. (5)

This research indicates that in addition to the abovementioned inhibition of LPL, estrogen also stimulates the lipolytic enzyme hormone sensitive lipase.

Some of the most compelling evidence for the antiadipogenic effect of estrogen in both males and females comes from studies of estrogen receptor knockout mice and humans with aromatase deficiency. Both the afflicted humans and the knockout mice exhibit obesity. A detailed look at this topic can be found in a study of estrogen receptor knockout mice (6) Quoting from that study,

The one known human male lacking ER had a body weight approximately 2 SD greater than normal. However, this individual also had increased height because of a lack of epiphysial plate fusion. Thus, continued growth may mitigate potential increases in WAT that might normally occur because of a lack of ER. However, men and women lacking aromatase manifest truncal obesity. This and the insulin resistance and impaired glucose tolerance observed in both humans lacking ER or aromatase and their murine counterparts emphasize that similar effects accompany loss of ER in both species and strongly suggest ER may regulate adipose tissue in men.

Estrogen as an Anorectic Hormone

I also mentioned that estrogen is a potent anorectic, hunger-suppressing hormone. This effect is thought to be due to an estrogen-induced inhibition in melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) signaling (7). MCH is a neuropeptide found in the hypothalamus that is also thought to be involved in leptin’s regulation of appetite. Leptin, an anorectic hormone secreted from adipose tissue, acts on the specific receptor present on its target neurons in the brain, and suppresses the expression of both MCH and its receptor. So we see that the actions of both estrogen and leptin are at least partly mediated through interactions with MCH. In rats and mice, intracerebroventricular administration of MCH induces hyperphagia, whereas MCH deficiency induced by targeted gene deletion leads to a hypophagia syndrome and loss of body fat.

Under normal conditions, restricted food availability leads to a drop in leptin. Falling leptin levels in turn elevate Neuropeptide Y (NPY), a hunger inducing peptide, and decrease expression of pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC), the precursor of the anorexic melanocortin -MSH, a hunger suppressing hormone. Both these changes result in elevated MHC, and food seeking behavior is initiated. When high levels of estrogen are present, the normal food seeking brought on by the changes in NPY, POMC, and MHC described above is blocked, as depicted in the diagram below, adapted from (7)

Figure 1. Proposed model of the effects of estrogen on hypothalamic neuronal pathways involved in the regulation of energy balance. A, In response to energy restriction, circulating leptin and insulin levels decrease, resulting in increased gene expression of orexigenic peptides (e.g., NPY) and decreased gene expression of anorexic peptides (e.g., POMC) in neurons of the ARC. These neuronal responses are proposed to increase expression of the orexigenic neuropeptide MCH in neurons of the LHA, which in turn promote increased food intake. B, Estrogen-mediated weight loss and anorexia also lower plasma leptin and insulin, but the expected activation of MCH neurons fails to occur in the presence of estrogen, despite the preservation of "upstream" ARC NPY and POMC neuronal responses to reduced adiposity signaling. This inhibition of MCH neurons by estrogen is hypothesized to contribute to the sustained anorexia observed with chronic estrogen exposure in male rodents. Adapted from Mystkowski et.al. J Neurosci. 2000 Nov 15;20(22):8637-42.

Estrogen Promotes Fat Burning During Exercise

For ethical reasons, the bulk of the research described was carried out in females and male animals. However, one recent study looked at the effects of estrogen administration on energy expenditure in exercising men (8). In this study male subjects cycled for 90 min at an intensity of 65% VO2max following eight days of either estrogen supplementation (2 mg 17beta-estradiol/day) or placebo. Estrogen supplementation significantly decreased carbohydrate oxidation by 5-16% and leucine oxidation by 16% (indicating a sparing effect on glycogen and muscle) whereas it significantly increased lipid oxidation by 22-44% at rest and during exercise. The authors concluded that estrogen influences fuel source selection at rest and during endurance exercise in men characterized by a reduced dependence on amino acids and carbohydrate and an increased reliance on lipids as a fuel source.

The administered dose of estrogen in (8) resulted in an increase in plasma estradiol from a baseline of 125 pM/L to 876 pM/L.

The authors suggest that the change in substrate use during exercise caused by estrogen may result for estrogen related stimulation of beta and possibly alpha adrenergic receptors. I see a problem with this hypothesis, however, since research has shown that beta receptor stimulation during exercise actually has the opposite effect, sparing fat at the expense of glycogen oxidation (9). Whatever the underlying mechanism is, estrogen clearly promotes fat burning in men.

Studies Involving Male to Female Transsexuals

Studies where hormonal treatment was administered to male to female transsexuals are often cited as evidence that estrogen administration to men leads to accumulation of subcutaneous fat.

These studies are typically confounded by the co-administration of progestational antiandrogens along with estradiol (24). The observed increase in subcutaneous fat in these subjects could very well be due to the progestational antiandrogens and the resulting drop in testosterone, which itself is a lipolytic hormone in subcutaneous adipose tissue.

All Estrogens are Not Created Equal

So far we have dwelt on the effects of estrogen itself. However, considerable work has shown that the major metabolites of estradiol and estrone are those hydroxylated (possess an OH group) at either the C-2 or the C-16alpha positions, although forms hydroxylated at the C-4 and C-15alpha are present, but in relatively lesser amounts. There exists a complete divergence in the biological properties of the 2- and 16alpha-hydroxylated metabolites of estradiol. 2-hydroxyestrone (2-OHE1) has been found to exert a modest anti-estrogenic effect in some tissues (10) and is popularly called the “good estrogen”. Studies on its ability to alter Lutienizing Hormone (LH) have yielded variable results, with some studies showing it increases LH production while others report either no change or a slight drop in LH with large doses of 2-OHE1.16alpha-hydroxyestrone on the other is a potent estrogen (11). In addition, it is associated with various cancers and has been shown to be a mutagen (cancer promoting agent).

Figure 2. Pathways of Estradiol metabolism, showing the so-called “good” metabolite 2-hydroxyestrone and the “bad” metabolite 16alpha-hydroxyestrone.

Figure 3. Schematic illustration of the metabolic pathway depicted in figure 2 showing additional estrogenic metabolites affected by DIM.

Phytochemicals such as indole-3-carbinol (I3C) are components of cruciferous vegetables, which exhibit antitumor activity associated with altered carcinogen metabolism and detoxification. The compound 3,3'-diindolylmethane, (DIM), is a major metabolite of I3C now available in supplement form. DIM directs estrogen metabolism away from “bad” estrogen to the good 2-hydroxyestrone/estradiol metabolites. Moreover, DIM itself exhibits antiestrogenic properties according to some researchers, and estrogenic activity according to others, much as if it were a SERM (12, 24). Among the hypothesized mechanisms of chemoprevention by I3C and DIM is their ability to induce a number of phase I enzymes in liver and colon, including cytochrome P450 (CYP) 1A1, CYP1A2, and CYP 3A. Increased activity of phase I drug-metabolizing enzymes can protect against some carcinogens by increasing their rate of oxidative metabolism to less toxic metabolites.

So by taking supplements containing 3,3'-diindolylmethane we can possibly lessen the likelihood of developing prostate and possibly other cancers, since research has shown that 3,3'-diindolylmethane has direct anticancer effects on the prostate independent of its ability to suppress “bad” estrogen (13). However, at least part of the ability of DIM to help prevent prostate cancer may lie is its antiandrogenic as well as antiestrogenic properties. Studies using prostate cancer (LNCaP) cells show that at physiologically obtainable levels DIM acts as a pure androgen antagonist that blocks expression of androgen-responsive genes and inhibits AR nuclear translocation (14).

One theory is that DIM appears to exert its antiestrogenic/antiandrogenic properties by acting as a weak agonist at the so-called aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) (15). The AhR has been extensively studied due to the fact that a number of environmental toxins such as 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) exert their effects by acting as strong agonists of the AhR. Dioxins are well known to disrupt reproductive activity in animals by deranging gonadal, pituitary, and CNS function. TCDD, like DIM acts as an antiestrogen in numerous tissues. At least part of TCDD’s antiestrogenic activity results from activation of proteosomes that degrade the estrogen receptor (16).

It’s intriguing to speculate whether DIM might also be capable of ER degradation in the pituitary, which we noted possesses AhR receptors and is sensitive to TCDD. If so, DIM might block estrogen related negative feedback on the HPTA. Yet another theory on DIM action proposes that in some tissues it activates the estrogen receptor independently of the presence of estrogen by activating the so-called PKA- and MAPK signaling systems (22).

As noted above, some studies show 2-hydroxyestrone has no suppressive effect on the HPTA while other research shows either suppression or enhancement. Another metabolite of estradiol, depicted in figure 3, is 2-hydroxyestradiol. Animal experiments have shown that administration of 2-hydroxyestradiol can override the suppressive effect of estradiol on pituitary LH secretion in males (17). The same study showed that the bad estrogen 4-hyroxyestradiol was able to suppress LH production
As can be seen in figures 3 and 4, both 2-hydroxyestradiol and 2-hydroxyestrone are methylated during their metabolism by the body. Interestingly, 2-methoxyestradiol (2-MeOE2) has a significantly higher affinity for Sex Hormone Binding Globulin than do estradiol and even testosterone (18). This is significant in that 2-MeOE2, by virtue of its higher affinity for SHBG than testosterone, can displace testosterone from SHBG, possibly enlarging the fraction of free, or bioactive testosterone.

16alpha-hydroxyestrone may play a role in a number of diseases other than cancers. For example, the estrogen found in the synovial fluid of rheumatoid arthritis patients is primarily the proinflammatory 16alpha-hydroxyestrone and may be responsible for the inflammation associated with that disease (19, 20). DIM may prove useful in treating or ameliorating the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis and other estrogen related autoimmune diseases that primarily affect women. Also of interest is the observation that while estradiol has well-known neuroprotective actions, 2-hydroxy-estradiol appears to be significantly more neuroprotective than its parent, estradiol (21). Of course, standard medical protocols should be followed and a physician’s advice obtained, before self-medicating with DIM to treat any disease.

Since some evidence suggests DIM might generate estrogen metabolites that suppress LH production, it might not be advisable to use DIM as the sole agent during Post Cycle Therapy. When used post cycle with a SERM such as Clomid that stimulates the HPTA, DIM could offer a number of potential health advantages by shunting estrogen metabolites towards the more healthful 2-OH series while at the same time elevating free testosterone levels. Similarly, during a cycle of aromatizable steroids, when estrogen is high and the HPTA is suppressed, DIM use may offer a number of health benefits due to its actions described above.

For a person not using anabolics and unconcerned about the complexities of Post Cycle Therapy, DIM use may confer enough health benefits, such as possible cancer prevention, to warrant its use as a supplement. And, as mentioned above, we may get a boost in free testosterone as well. Long term safety studies in animals have failed to detect any toxicity due to DIM (23).

In summary, while certainly not advocating estrogen supplementation for men, I also believe it is not the evil hormone it is often made out to be. We should accept it for what it is, a naturally occurring part of or normal hormonal milieu, that can be manipulated in form and quantity to better suit the needs of male athletes and bodybuilders by focusing on altering the byproducts of estrogen metabolism.

References

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17) Franks S, MacLusky NJ, Naish SJ, Naftolin F. Actions of catechol oestrogens on concentrations of serum luteinizing hormone in the adult castrated rat: various effects of 4-hydroxyoestradiol and 2-hydroxyoestradiol. J Endocrinol. 1981 May;89(2):289-95.
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so much mixed advice on this now lol....
 
so much mixed advice on this now lol....
Its actually quite simple if you follow the science. Test + Estradiol when properly balanced is good for fat loss.
 
I'll admit it.i was stupid (still am in many ways) I at one point broke the synovex tabs. And i was confident I got alot of the estradiol out. But surely not all of it. I had not estrogen sides and actually looked pretty good. Which in turn has made my go more gentle on the ais. Not for certain i look that much better, but i feel better.
 
Wow trying to read that is like trying to drink out of a fire hydrant....mess you up.:wits:
 
I like pictures. Can you add the graphs (Figure 1-3) that the author references to?

It seems there is not enough conclusive evidence to say this is "truth" but the nature of the article is very appealing and actually your timing Heavy is right on for what I have been thinking about.

For my PCT, my thought was to use clomid stacked with a low dose of proviron. My knuckleheaded theory for this approach would do two things.
1. Clomid will be ''up-regulated" by the use of the proviron.
2. The two together would help mitigate fat gain during the pct run.

I was thinking of adding an AI to this or another serm like nolva, but I don't think I will in the beginning now. I will see what happens and go from there. Is my logic skewed in thinking that two pronged PCT run will work like I think it will?

Anyway, Great Post Heavy.


More food for thought:
http://mcb.asm.org/content/early/20...bstract?cited-by=yes&legid=mcb;MCB.01147-13v1
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23541989
17 beta-estradiol
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8194462
 
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