Adrenal Gland B&B Flashcards

1
Q

how does venous drainage differ between the left and right adrenal gland?

A

Left adrenal drains into renal vein, which drains into IVC after crossing over

Right adrenal drains right into IVC

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2
Q

from what is the adrenal cortex vs medulla derived?

A

cortex - mesoderm

medulla - neural crest (under SNS control)

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3
Q

what are the parts of the pituitary-adrenal axis?

A
  1. hypothalamus secretes CRH (corticotropin releasing hormone) from the paraventricular nucleus (PVN)
  2. anterior pituitary secretes ACTH (adrenocorticotropic hormone), which stimulate cAMP/PKA in adrenal gland
  3. adrenal cortex secrets cortisol
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4
Q

how does estrogen affect the levels of cortisol within the plasma?

A

estrogen increases levels of cortisol binding globulin (CBG), the carrier protein for a cortisol in the plasma

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5
Q

explain why peripheral neutrophil count rises in patients with high cortisol

A

cortisol suppresses the immune system by blocking neutrophil migration - neutrophils are trapped in the tissues, and can’t migrate into the vasculature

(also sequesters lymphocytes in spleen/lymph nodes)

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6
Q

cortisol inactivates this key inflammatory transcription factor - what is?

A

NK-kB: controls synthesis of inflammatory mediators such as COX-2, PLA2, lipoxygenase

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7
Q

what is the effect of chronically elevated cortisol on muscle, skin, and bones?

A

muscle – atrophy

skin - blunted cell division, decreased collagen, inhibition of fibroblasts —> thin skin, easy bruising, striae (can see small veins under skin)

bones - inhibits osteoblasts —> osteopenia and osteoporosis

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8
Q

how is cholesterol converted to aldosterone and what are they key enzymes (4)?

A
  1. cholesterol —> pregnenolone
  2. —> progesterone via 3-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase
  3. —> 11-deoxycorticosterone via 21-alpha hydroxylase
  4. —> corticosterone via 11-beta hydroxylase
  5. —> aldosterone via aldosterone synthase

[3 Boys (Beta) turned 21 And (Alpha) had 11 Beers (Beta) - now they are Adults (Aldosterone)]

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9
Q

how does angiotensin II stimulate the production of aldosterone from the adrenal glands?

A

activate aldosterone synthase, which converts corticosterone to aldosterone in the zona glomerulosa

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10
Q

how is cortisol synthesized in the zona fasciculata and what are the key enzymes (4)?

A
  1. pregnenolone OR progesterone from the above zona glomerulosa are converted to 17-hydroxy-pregnenolone/progesterone via 17-alpha hydroxylase (CYP17)
    1b. 17-hydroxypregnenolone —> 17-hydroxyprogesterone via 3-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase
  2. —> 11-deoxycortisol via 21-alpha hyroxylase
  3. —> cortisol via 11-beta hydroxylase

[17 Added (Alpha) to 3 is Below (beta) 21, Above (Alpha) 11 - math gives me stress like Cortisol]

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11
Q

how does ACTH stimulate the adrenal cortex to synthesize cortisol?

A

ACTH activates desmolase, which converts cholesterol —> prognenolone (by cleaving a side chain), which is then funneled into the cortisol synthesis pathway in the zona fasciculata

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12
Q

how are androgens synthesized in the zona reticularis and what key enzyme is required?

A
  1. 17-hydroxypregnenolone OR 17-hydroxyprogesterone from the above zona fasciculata are converted to androstenedione
    1b. if starting with 17-hydroxypregnenolone, first converted to DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone), then to androstenedione via 3-beta hydroxysteroid dehdyrogenase
  2. androstenedione —> testosterone

[3 layers Below (below) the top of the cortex is where Testosterone is made]

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13
Q

what kind of drug is ketoconazole and what is its effect on the adrenal cortex?

A

ketoconazole: antifungal, blocks ergosterol synthesis in fungi

potent inhibitor of 17,20 lyase, necessary for testosterone production —> gynecomastia

also inhibits 17-alpha hydroxylase (CYP17) and desmolase necessary for cortisol synthesis —> can be used to treat Cushing’s syndrome

[I went KETO at 17]

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14
Q

how are the layers of the adrenal cortex ordered? what is produced in each?

A
  1. zona glomerulosa (outermost) - mineralcorticoids
  2. zona fasciculata - glucocorticoids
  3. zona reticularis (innermost) - androgens

G-F-R

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15
Q

which cells produce testosterone in males and females, respectively?

A

males - testicular Leydig cells

females - ovarian theca cells

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16
Q

what has to happen to DHEAS (adrenal androgen) for it to be used as a precursor for bioactive androgens (testosterone and dihydrotestosterone) and estrogens (estradiol-17beta and estriol)?

A

must be desulfonated by steroid sulfatase - expressed within placenta, ovaries, testes

17
Q

what is the most common form of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH)?

A

21 hydroxylase deficiency - required for production of both aldosterone and cortisol

loss of cortisol-dependent negative feedback of ACTH leads to unchecked ACTH secretion —> high steroidogenesis of DHEAS and androstenedione

18
Q

name a bioactive and weakly active example of each of the following families of steroids (in normal, non-pregnant individuals):
a. androgens
b. estrogens
c. glucocorticoids
d. mineralocorticoids
e. progestins

A

a. androgens: testosterone, DHT (strong) / androstenedione, DHEAS (weak)
b. estrogens: estradiol (strong) / estriol, estrone (weak)
c. glucocorticoids: cortisol (strong) / cortisone (weak)
d. mineralocorticoids: aldosterone (strong) / corticosterone (weak)
e. progestins: progesterone (strong) / pregnenolone (weak)

19
Q

what are the primary sources of estrogen in females vs males?

A

females: ovarian granulosa cells, corpus luteum, placenta

males: testicular Leydig cells

20
Q

the production of _______ from cholesterol marks the onset of de novo steroidogenesis

A

pregnenolone

21
Q

the adrenal zona fasciculata and zona reticularis cannot produce testosterone and DHT because they lack which 2 necessary enzymes?

A
  1. 17-beta HSD (converts androstenedione to testosterone)
  2. 5-alpha reductase (converts testosterone to DHT)