ERS08 Physiology Of Thyroid Flashcards

1
Q

Thyroid gland

A
  • one of largest endocrine gland
  • C5-T1
  • behind Sternohyoid + Sternothyroid
  • wrap around Cricoid cartilage, superior tracheal ring
  • Blood supply: Superior + Inferior thyroid arteries (ECA)
  • Venous drainage: Superior + Middle + Inferior thyroid veins
  • Highly vascular
  • Ductless

Lobules of gland:
- Follicles (structural unit of thyroid)
—> each follicle lined by simple layer epithelium by ***Principal cells surrounding colloid-filled core
—> colloid: Iodinated thyroglobulin (precursor to thyroid hormones)

Principal cells:

  • Colloid, thyroid hormones production
  • Functionally polarised, each side of membrane has specific function (synthesis of thyroid hormones + release)
Parafollicular cells (C cells):
- Calcitonin production

Blood capillaries:

  • deliver Iodine to Principal cell
  • carry thyroid hormones away from gland
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2
Q

Hormones from Thyroid gland

A
  1. Calcitonin
    - Parafollicular cells
    - ***Peptide hormone (32 a.a.)
    - Regulation of Ca metabolism (esp. blood Ca level)
  2. Triiodothyronine (T3)
  3. Thyroxine (T4)
  • from Thyroglobulin (134 Tyrosine residues)
  • Principal cells
  • from 2x Tyrosine a.a. —> bind covalently to ***Iodine
  • ***Peptide hormone
  • ***Poorly water-soluble —> bound to carrier protein in blood
  • Growth, development, control of body temp, energy levels through control of basal metabolic processes

Iodine:

  • seafood, seaweed, dairy food (min 150 µg / day, higher requirement in pregnancy)
  • taking KI with ACE inhibitor, K-sparing diuretics —> ↑ risk of hyperkalaemia
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3
Q

***Calcitonin

A
  • Peptide hormone
  • Synthesised as large precursor molecules
    —> process to mature peptide hormone
    —> packed into vesicles and stored
    —> released upon stimulation
- Rising / High [Ca] in plasma
—> detected by ***CaSR (Calcium sensing receptor, a ***GPCR)
—> responsible for molecular process of Ca sensing on Parafollicular cells
—> trigger IP3/Ca signaling pathway
—> Phospholipase C activation
—> IP3
—> Ca release from ER
—> Calcitonin secretion

Physiological effects:
- Net ↓ plasma [Ca]

Calcitonin receptors:
- mediated by high affinity Calcitonin receptor (GPCR family)
1. Osteoclasts
—> binding of Calcitonin inhibits osteoclasts motility + induce osteoclasts retraction
—> mediated by cAMP/PKA pathway
—> inhibit bone resorption + allow osteoblasts come in for bone formation/lock Ca in bone
—> ↑ Ca stored
—> ↓ plasma Ca level

  1. Kidney
    —> Inhibit renal tubular Ca reabsorption + ↓ Calcitrol
    —> ↑ Ca excretion + ↓ Rate of intestinal absorption
  2. Intestinal effect (Indirect)
    —> ↓ Calcitrol from Kidney
    —> ↓ Rate of intestinal absorption
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4
Q

Thyroid hormones

A

Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Thyroid axis

Parvocellular neurons of Paraventricular nucleus (PVN) (Hypothalamus)
—> TRH (Thyrotropin-releasing hormone)
—> Thyrotrophs in Anterior pituitary (bind to GPCR (Gαq))
—> TSH release
—> TSH receptor
—> Stimulate synthesis + secretion of thyroid hormones from Follicular cells

Thyroid hormone synthesis + secretion under -ve feedback (short, long loop) by Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Thyroid axis

(Dopamine, Somatostatin, Glucocorticoid can inhibit TSH from Anterior pituitary)

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5
Q

TSH and TSH receptor

A

TSH:

  • Heterodimer (1α, 1β subunit)
  • Hypophysiotropic peptide

TSH receptor:

  • GPCR
  • basolateral membrane of thyroid follicular cells

Binding of TSH to TSH receptor
—> Gαs + Gαq activation
—> Adenyl cyclase + PLC activation
—> cAMP + PLC (IP3, DAG) signalling

cAMP (Gαs):

  1. ↑ Differentiation, Growth of Thyroid gland
  2. ***Thyroglobulin production and secretion into colloid
  3. ***Thyroid peroxidase production
  4. **Na/I symporter (NIS) expression on **basolateral membrane of Principal cells
  5. **Pendrin (Iodide transporter) translocation to **apical membrane of Principal cells

PLC (Gαq):
1. ***H2O2 generation by Dual oxidase

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6
Q

***Synthesis and Secretion of Thyroid hormones (T3, T4)

A
  1. Uptake of Iodide from blood by ***NIS (basolateral membrane)
    - cotransport 2 Na ions + 1 Iodide ion
    - Na gradient: Driving force (created by Na/K ATPase: Na pump back to blood)
  2. Efflux of Iodide into follicular lumen via ***Pendrin
  3. Iodide **oxidised to Iodine and rapidly organified by incorporation into selected tyrosyl residues of Thyroglobulin
    —> **
    Organification
    —> form mono-iodotyrosine (MIT) + di-iodotyrosine (DIT) on Thyroglobulin
    —> **catalysed by Thyroid peroxidase (with presence of **H2O2)
  4. Coupling reaction
    - T4 formed from 2x DIT
    - T3 formed from MIT + DIT
    —> T3, T4 still attached to Thyroglobulin
    —> stored in follicle as colloid (for ~2-3 months)
  5. T3, T4 liberated from Thyroglobulin scaffold before secreted as free hormone in blood
    —> require endocytosis of Iodinated Thyroglobulin from apical membrane (成舊野食翻落Follicular cell)
    —> ***digestion by Lysosomes (remaining MIT, DIT on Thyroglobulin will be deiodinated intracellularly —> Iodide transported back to colloid via Pendrin for reuse)
    —> free T3, T4
    —> T4&raquo_space;> T3 (40 fold in plasma conc)
  6. Circulating thyroid hormones bind to carrier protein
    - Thyroxine-binding globulin (~70%)
    - Albumin (~15%)
    - Transthyretin (~10%)
    - unbound (0.05%)
    —> ensure circulating reserve + delay metabolic clearance of hormone
    —> only unbound hormone are bioavailable
    —> clinical measurement: measure total T4 instead of unbound T4 (in absence of protein binding abnormality) + measure binding protein level

Changes in binding protein level:

  1. ↑ binding protein —> ↓ free thyroid hormone —> stimulate TSH release
  2. ↓ binding protein (chronic liver disease) —> ↑ free thyroid hormone —> suppress TSH release —> ↓ thyroid hormone synthesis and release
  3. Active biological half life
    - T4: 7 days
    - T3: 1 day
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7
Q

Assessment of Thyroid activity

A

Radioactive Iodine uptake

Normal Thyroid gland: uptake 10-35% of radioactive iodine through NIS

Abnormal Thyroid gland: higher/lower uptake (Hyperactivation / Hypoactivation of Thyroid gland)

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8
Q

MOA of Thyroid hormones

A

T4: prohormone
T3: active hormone
—> T4 needs to be deiodinated to T3 by ***Deiodinase within target cells before interact with Thyroid hormone receptor (THR)

T4, T3 enters cell via transporter (carrier-mediated)
—> T4 deiodinated into T3 via Deiodinase I / II
—> T3 interact with THR (
Nuclear receptor)
—> THR function as transcription factor
—> bind to TRE (Thyroid Hormone Response Element) on target gene
—> transcriptional regulation of target gene

2 THR identified (***Nuclear receptor family):

  1. THRα
  2. THRβ

THR expressed in all tissues (act on ALL cells / tissues!!!)

  • THRα: ***Peripheral tissue + Brain (brain, heart, skeletal muscle, kidney, liver)
  • THRβ: ***CNS (brain, pituitary, retina, inner ear, lung)
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9
Q

***Function of Thyroid hormones

A

Primary function:

  • 記: Metabolism + Growth + Development
  • Maintain normal cellular metabolic activity (transcription of Na/K-ATPase —> oxygen consumption, protein synthesis / degradation, growth, differentiation)

Nervous system:
1. **Promote fetal, post-natal CNS development
—> influence neuronal migration, myelination, axonal growth and development
2. **
Enhance SNS activity —> wakefulness, alertness, responsiveness towards stimuli

CVS (mainly T3, no deiodinase in cardiomyocyte):
1. **Regulates genes important for myocardial contraction, electrochemical signalling
—> ↑ SERCA, ↑ β1 receptors, ↓ phospholamban
—> ↑ HR, stroke volume, contractility
—> ↑ CO
2. **
Vasodilation —> ↓ systemic vascular resistance

Skeletal muscle:

  1. Muscle mass development
  2. Differentiation of contractile characteristics of skeletal muscle

Bone:
1. ***↑ Bone growth / turnover rate via activation of osteoblasts + osteoclasts

Gut:

  1. ***↑ Glucose absorption
  2. ↑ Rate of digestive enzymes secretion
  3. ***↑ GI motility

Adipose tissue

  1. ***↑ Thermogenesis
  2. ***↑ Weight loss in brown adipose tissue
  3. ↑ Catecholamine-mediated lipolysis by ↑ β-adrenoceptor expression

Others:

  1. Induce O2 utilisation by metabolically active tissue —> ↑ energy expenditure, basal metabolic rate
  2. ↓ Cholesterol
  3. Regulate epidermal cell proliferation and homeostasis
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10
Q

Disorders related to Thyroid hormones

A
  1. Hyperthyroidism (Thyrotoxicosis)
  2. Hypothyroidism
  3. Resistance to Thyroid hormone (RTH)
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11
Q

Hyperthyroidism (Thyrotoxicosis)

A
  1. Can occur during pregnancy: hCG from embryo turn on thyroid function for fetal growth
  2. Graves’ disease: autoimmune disease by ***Thyroid-stimulating Ig (TSI)
    —> mimic TSH
    —> continuously stimulate thyroid hormone production

Signs and Symptoms:

  1. ***Intolerance to heat, Facial flushing (∵ too much heat production)
  2. ***Palpitation (Rapid, Irregular heart beat), Cardiac hypertrophy
  3. ***Weight loss (∵ lipolysis)
  4. Bulging eyeballs (Graves’ ophthalmopathy) (AutoAb attack fibroblasts in eye muscle —> differentiate into fat cells, muscle —> inflammation —> edema around eye area)
  5. Diarrhoea
  6. Weakness of bone / muscle (Thyrotoxic periodic paralysis: secondary to hyperthyroidism ∵ ↑GFR, ↑Angiotensin, ↑Aldosterone —> Hypokalaemia —> Respiratory failure, Arrhythmia)
  7. ***Tremor
  8. **Goitre
    - only occur in Graves’, result of hyperplasia + hypertrophy of gland
    - also occur in **
    Primary Hypothyroidism —> ∵ High TSH from pituitary
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12
Q

Hypothyroidism

A
  1. Autoimmune inflammatory reaction —> Atrophy of glands
    - Hashimoto’s thyroiditis (Goitre)
  2. Congenital diseases
    - Cretinism - most severe form of hypothyroidism from poor development of thyroid gland —> associated with severe mental retardation and learning disability (∵ retarded nervous system growth / development)
    - Gene mutation involved in thyroid hormone production
  3. Medical treatment
    - surgical removal of Thyroid gland
  4. Iodine deficiency

Signs and Symptoms:

  1. ***Intolerance to cold, subnormal temperatures
  2. ***Extreme fatigue
  3. ***Weight gain
  4. ***Deep cocky voice (∵ deposition of mucopolysaccharides along vocal cord)
  5. Constipation
  6. ***Slow heartbeat
  7. Dry skin with brittle and thick nails (∵ retarded epidermal proliferation)
  8. ***Muscle weakness
  9. ***Delayed bone development
  10. ***Myxedema (∵ deposition of mucopolysaccharides in dermis —> swelling mucosal membrane, skin)
  11. **Goitre (occur in **Primary Hypothyroidism —> ∵ High TSH from pituitary)
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13
Q

Resistance to Thyroid hormone (RTH)

A

Mutation in THR α / β
—> reduction / lack of end-organ responsiveness to Thyroid hormone
—> symptoms of TH excess (in CNS) / deficiency (in periphery)

THRα mutation:
—> Peripheral + Brain
—> Resistance —> ∴ Hypothyroidism symptoms
—> ***Near-normal level of T3, T4 + Normal TSH (∵ not involved)
1. Delayed bone development
2. Chronic constipation
3. Slow heart rate
4. Impaired neural development, abnormal cortical layering, abnormal cerebellum development

THRβ mutation:
—> CNS
—> **Impaired negative feedback (∵ impaired HPT axis)
—> **
↑ T3, T4, TSH
1. Goitre (∵ ↑ TSH)
2. Fast heart rate (∵ ↑ T3)
3. Impaired neural development, abnormal cortical layering, abnormal cerebellum development

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