Signal
Glucocorticoid receptor signaling modulates hormone effects in contraceptive exposure and pregnancy
Evidence first: scan the strongest sources, then decide whether to go deeper.
Published 2026-06-19 21:28 UTCUpdated 2026-06-20 03:08 UTC
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clinical_trialsr_and_dsafety_signals
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Evidence trail (top sources)
top sources (1 domains)domains are deduped. counts indicate coverage, not truth.1 top source shown
limited source diversity in top sources
Overview
Recent preclinical studies reveal how glucocorticoid receptor (GR) signaling influences hormonal regulation relevant to oral contraceptive use and pregnancy.
Score total
0.72
Momentum 24h
2
Posts
2
Origins
1
Source types
1
Duplicate ratio
0%
Why now
- New preclinical data reveal molecular pathways linking hormones to stress and drug metabolism.
- Pregnancy and contraceptive use remain critical areas for optimizing drug safety and efficacy.
- Advances in CRISPR and animal models enable detailed mechanistic studies of hormone receptor signaling.
Why it matters
- Understanding GR signaling clarifies mood side effects linked to oral contraceptives.
- Insights into hepatic transporter regulation inform drug metabolism changes during pregnancy.
- These findings support safer drug use and therapeutic strategies in reproductive health contexts.
LLM analysis
Topic mix: lowPromo risk: lowSource quality: medium
Recurring claims
- Oral contraceptives alter glucocorticoid receptor signaling in brain regions affecting mood regulation.
- Cortisol induces pregnancy-associated hepatic drug transporter expression via glucocorticoid receptor and hepatocyte nuclear factors.
How sources frame it
- Schuh Et Al.: neutral
- Sharma Et Al.: neutral
These preclinical studies provide important mechanistic insights into glucocorticoid receptor signaling affecting mood and hepatic drug metabolism in reproductive health, supporting further translational research.
All evidence
All evidence
Cortisol Drives Pregnancy-Associated Induction of Hepatic OAT2, NTCP, and OCT1 in HepaRG cells Through GR-, HNF1α-, and HNF4α-Dependent Signaling
bioRxiv (all subjects) · biorxiv.org · 2026-06-20 03:08 UTC
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Posts loaded: 0Publishers: 1Origin domains: 1Duplicates: -
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Top publishers (this list)
- bioRxiv (all subjects) (1)
Top origin domains (this list)
- biorxiv.org (1)