Estradiol

It is the primary estrogen in humans. Among its functions and effects:
- Breast development and maintenance
- Adding fat to breasts, hips, thighs during puberty
- Improving bone strength and density
- Accelerating bone maturation and bringing epiphyses to closure, completing growth
- Growth of the uterus
- Development of the endometrial lining to a thickness necessary to support pregnancy and menstruation
- Promoting and maintaining vaginal mucosal thickness and secretions
- Serving as the primary feedback to the brain of sex hormone levels in both males and females.
One of the fascinating twists to mammalian sexual differentiation is that estradiol is one of the two active metabolites of testosterone in males (the other being dihydrotestosterone). Estradiol cannot be transferred readily from the circulation into the brain. Since fetuses of both sexes are exposed to similarly high levels of maternal estradiol, it can play little role in prenatal sexual differentiation. However, testosterone enters the central nervous system more freely and significant amounts are aromatized to estradiol within the brain of most male mammals, including humans. There is now much evidence that the programming of adult male sexual behavior in "lower mammals," (such as mounting behavior rather than lordosis), is largely dependent on estradiol produced in the central nervous system during prenatal life and early infancy from testosterone. We do not yet know whether this process plays a minimal or significant part in human sexual behaviors.
See also estrogen insensitivity syndrome.