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Relationship: 369
Title
Activation, PPARα leads to Decrease, Steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (STAR)
Upstream event
Downstream event
AOPs Referencing Relationship
| AOP Name | Adjacency | Weight of Evidence | Quantitative Understanding | Point of Contact | Author Status | OECD Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PPARα activation in utero leading to impaired fertility in males | non-adjacent | Moderate | Arthur Author (send email) | Open for citation & comment | EAGMST Under Review |
Taxonomic Applicability
Sex Applicability
Life Stage Applicability
The direct link of PPARα in regulation of the cholesterol transport in mitochondria and hormone synthesis derives from studies demonstrating that PPARα may act as indirect transrepressor of the key steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1) (S. Plummer et al. 2007), (S. M. Plummer et al. 2013). SF-1 is a transcription factor essential for expression of genes involved in steroidogenesis (including Steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR)).
| ID | Experimental Design | Species | Upstream Observation | Downstream Observation | Citation (first author, year) | Notes |
|---|
| Title | First Author | Biological Plausibility |
Dose Concordance |
Temporal Concordance |
Incidence Concordance |
|---|
Biological Plausibility
Dose Concordance Evidence
Temporal Concordance Evidence
Incidence Concordance Evidence
Uncertainties and Inconsistencies
Uncertainties
PPARα was also shown to regulate Translator protein (TSPO), which is a mitochondrial outer membrane protein implicated in cholesterol import to the inner mitochondrial (for details see Relationship:370). Moreover, there is evidence that activated PPARα regulates the expression of enzymes involved in steroid metabolism (17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase IV, 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase I, and 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase V (Hermanowski-Vosatka et al. 2000), (Corton et al. 1996), (Wong et al. 2002)).
Inconsistencies In utero rat exposure to the PPARα agonist Wy-14,643 did not reduce fetal testis steroidogenic gene expression or testosterone production (Hannas et al. 2012).
Response-response Relationship
Time-scale
Known Feedforward/Feedback loops influencing this KER
See Table 1.