Chemistry, asked by Anonymous, 4 months ago

Are testosterone and estrogen homologues?if yes/no, why? Give their structure and IUPAC name.​

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Answered by heera1805
1

Answer:a

herapeutic Testosterone is a synthetic form of the endogenous androgenic steroid testosterone. In vivo, testosterone is irreversibly converted to dihydrotestosterone DHT in target tissues by the enzyme 5-alpha reductase. Testosterone or DHT ligandandrogen receptor complexes act as transcription factor complexes, stimulating the expression of various responsive genes DHT binds with higher affinity to androgen receptors than testosterone activating gene expression more efficiently

Testosterone is an androstanoid having 17beta-hydroxy and 3-oxo groups, together with unsaturation at C-4-C-5.. It has a role as an androgen, a human metabolite, a Daphnia magna metabolite and a mouse metabolite. It is a 17beta-hydroxy steroid, an androstanoid, a C19-steroid and a 3-oxo-Delta(4) steroid.

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Answered by tin37
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