http://www.hindustantimes.com/Scientists-find-female-sex-hormone-in-plant/H1-Article1-505844.aspx


Scientists find female sex hormone in plant


Press Trust Of India
Washington, February 06, 2010
Last Updated: 00:55 IST(6/2/2010)
 


In a finding that may change scientific understanding of the evolution of 
female sex hormone 'progesterone', scientists have claimed to have found the 
hormone in a plant.

Until now, scientists thought that only animals could make progesterone -- a 
steroid hormone secreted by the ovaries -- which prepares the uterus for 
pregnancy and maintains it. A synthetic version, progestin, is used in birth 
control pills and other medications.

"The significance of the unequivocal identification of progesterone cannot be 
overstated," said the study by a team led by Guido F Pauli at the College of 
Pharmacy, Chicago. "While the biological role of progesterone has been 
extensively studied in mammals, the reason for its presence in plants is less 
apparent," it said.

Though scientists had previously identified progesterone like substances in 
plants and speculated that the hormone itself could exist in plants, they had 
not found the actual hormone in plants until now.

Pauli and his colleagues used two powerful laboratory techniques, nuclear 
magnetic resonance and mass spectroscopy, to detect progesterone in leaves of 
the Common Walnut, or English Walnut, tree.

They also identified five new progesterone-related steroids in a plant 
belonging to the buttercup family. Following the discovery, published in ACS 
Journal of Natural Products, the scientists believe the hormone, like other 
steroid hormones, might be an ancient bioregulator that evolved billions of 
years ago, before the appearance of modern plants and animals.

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