Endocrinology of the Thyroid Gland Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the structure and function of a thyroid follicle

A

1) A sphere of follicular cells surrounding colloid inner core, mainly contains thyroglobulin
2) Basolateral membrane (exterior) contains G-coupled receptors for TSH
3) Produces thyroid hormone

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2
Q

Describe the synthesis of thyroid hormone (8 steps).

A

1) Iodide is taken up from blood by follicular iodide pump on basolateral membrane, coupled to Na/K ATPase
2) Iodide diffuses down gradient into the follicular space (through follicular cells)
3) Iodide is oxidized via thyroperoxidase + H2O2
4) Thioperoxidase then iodizes tyrosine residues on thyroglobulin (mono- or di-iodoTyr, aka MIT or DIT)
5) 2 DIT condense to form T4 OR 1 DIT + 1 MIT condense to form T3 on TG
6) TG is phagocytosed by follicular cell, degraded in lysosomes to amino acids, MIT, DIT, T3 and T4
7) T3/T4 are released into blood
8) MIT/DIT are deiodinated & recycled
- via thyroxine deiodinase, inhibited by PTU

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3
Q

What molecules modulate the activity of the iodide pump, thus affecting TH synthesis?

A

1) Stimulated by TSH
2) Inhibited by
- thiocyanate (inavtivation)
- Perchlorate (CI)
- Perrhenate (CI)
- Pertechnetate (CI)

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4
Q

Which inhibitor of TH synthesis is different from most others and why?

A

Propylthiouracil (PTU) inhibits most steps of TH synthesis, but does NOT inhibit the iodide pump.

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5
Q

How is thyroperoxidase regulated?

A

Stimulated by TSH, inhibited by PTU

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6
Q

What are the major functions of thyroxine deiodinase?

A

1) Recycles MIT and DIT in thyroid follicle
2) Converts T4 to T3 in periphery
- may remove wrong I to form inactive rT3

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7
Q

What are the 4 thiourea drugs? What is their function?

A

Antithyroid drugs:

1) thiourea
2) thiouracil
3) polythiouracil
4) methimazole

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8
Q

What are the indications for use of PTU vs/ methimazole?

A

1) Methimazole is drug of choice
- but causes 1st trimester birth defects
2) PTU causes severe liver damage
- used in 1st trimester of pregnancy
- methimazole allergy
- thyroid storm (met doesn’t prevent conversion of T4 to T3)

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9
Q

How are T3/T4 transported? How much hormone is free in bloodstream? How long are their half-lives?

A

T3/T4 bind TBG (thyroid binding globulin)

  1. 3% T3 is free, 1.5 day half-life
  2. 03% of T4 is free, 6.5 day half-life
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10
Q

How are TH levels regulated? What is the best measure for hyper/hypothyroidism?

A

1) TH is regulated by negative feedback, so high TH decreases levels of TRH & TSH, and low levels of TH increase levels of TSH & TRH
2) TSH is the best measure since circulating T3/T4 levels may fluctuate

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11
Q

Describe endemic goiter.

A

Enlarged thyroid gland caused by low levels of iodine in the diet.
-Low TH results in oversecretion of TSH leading to thyroid hypertrophy

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12
Q

Describe congenital hypothyroidism

A

Insufficient TH production due to dysfunctional thyroid gland.
-Leads to cretinism if untreated (severely stunted physical & mental growth & development)

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13
Q

Describe Grave’s disease

A

Autoimmune disorder that produces Thyroid Stimulating Immunoglobulins (TSI): bind TSH receptor regardless of TSH levels

  • Leads to hyperthyroidism
  • Also present with exophthalmos (eye bulging) due to immune rxn behind eye
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14
Q

What is the effect of taking exogenous Growth Hormone on thyroid activity?

A

GH upregulates somatostatin, which will inhibit TSH and lead to hypothyroidism

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15
Q

Describe Hashimoto’s thyroiditis

A

Autoimmune disorder characterized by production of autoantibodies against thyroglobulin or thyroperoxidase, leading to destruction of thyroid tissue and hypothyroidism.

  • Often concurrent with Grave’s diseaese
  • Here, hyper/hypothyroid determined by prevalence of respective antibodies
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16
Q

What is the Wolff-Chaikov effect?

A

While low iodine increases TH synthesis, HIGH intake of iodine will INHIBIT TH synthesis. May be used to treat thyroid storm.

17
Q

What is a thyroid storm?

A

Rare occurrence in which a patient produces severely high levels of T3/T4 in response to physical stress such as surgery, leading to dangerous CV complications

18
Q

What does “organification” refer to?

A

Iodination of tyrosine residues

19
Q

What structure is left when T3/T4 is cleaved from thyroglobulin?

A

Dehydroalanine

20
Q

What is the daily requirement for iodine?

A

30% of consumed iodine is absorbed

150µg needed daily for T3/T4 containing 50 µg iodide

21
Q

What tissues can take up iodine?

A

Thyroid (can oxidize)

Salivary glands, mammary glands, chorion, & stomach can take up iodine but can’t oxidize

22
Q

What is the concentration gradient of iodine inside and outside the follicular cell?

A

500:1

23
Q

Describe thyroperoxidase

A

1) Requires H2O2, produced by NADPH-dependent enzyme resembling cytochrome C reductase
2) Occurs on luminal surface & inhibited by thiourea drugs (PTU)
3) Synthesis stimulated by TSH

24
Q

How are thyroid hormones stored?

A

Stored in thyroid follicles as thyroglobulin (in colloid)

25
Q

How is T4 converted to T3?

A

Thyroxine deiodinase (can also form rT3), mostly in periphery

26
Q

How does thyroid hormone receptor binding differ between direct repeats and inverted repeats?

A

Direct: bind as homodimers
Inverse: bind as heterodimers