RÉSUMÉ
Parabens are commonly used preservatives in cosmetics, food, and pharmaceutical products. The objective of this study was to examine the effect of nine parabens on human and rat 17ß-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 1 (17ß-HSD1) in human placental and rat ovarian cytosols, as well as on estradiol synthesis in BeWo cells. The results showed that the IC50 values for these compounds varied from methylparaben with the weakest inhibition (106.42⯵M) to hexylparaben with the strongest inhibition (2.05⯵M) on human 17ß-HSD1. Mode action analysis revealed that these compounds acted as mixed inhibitors. For rats, the IC50 values ranged from the weakest inhibition for methylparaben (no inhibition at 100 µM) to the most potent inhibition for hexylparaben (0.87⯵M), and they functioned as mixed inhibitors. Docking analysis indicated that parabens bind to the region bridging the NADPH and steroid binding sites of human 17ß-HSD1 and the NADPH binding site of rat 17ß-HSD1. Bivariate correlation analysis demonstrated negative correlations between LogP, molecular weight, heavy atoms, and apolar desolvation energy, and the IC50 values of these compounds. In conclusion, this study identified the inhibitory effects of parabens and their binding mechanisms on human and rat 17ß-HSD1, as well as their impact on hormone synthesis.