Steroids of the adrenal cortex Flashcards

1
Q

What are the steroids of the adrenal cortex?

A

Glucocorticoids: principally cortisol in mammals: cortisol
Mineralocorticoids: aldosterone
Androgens

Cortisol:
“Stress hormone”, but essential to life
Metabolic, cardiovascular and immune functions

Aldosterone:
Maintains blood volume by regulating amount of body sodium

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2
Q

What is the adrenal gland divided into?

A

Medulla (in middle)

and

The cortex

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3
Q

What is the cortex divided into and what do each of these parts secrete?

A

Zona glomerulosa - Mineralocorticoids

Zona fasciculta - gluco-corticoids

Zona reticularis = adrenal androgens

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4
Q

What is found in the medulla?

A

Chromaffin cells

Medullary veins

Splanchnic nerves

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5
Q

What is the general function of mineralocorticoids?

A

Sodium retention (whole body sodium)

  • Active reabsorption of sodium (with associated passive reabsorption of water)
  • Active secretion of potassium
Volume regulation (part of RAAS)
 - Note: increased MC activity increases the amount of sodium retained in the body, not the concentration. This is because an osmotically-equivalent amount of water is retained with the sodium, so the concentration doesn’t change
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6
Q

What receptor does aldosterone bind to?

Can cortisol bind to this?

A

Mineralcorticoid receptor

yes

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7
Q

Circulating concentrations of cortisol much higher than aldosterone so why doesn’t cortisol stimulate salt and water retention?

A

Cortisol is rapidly metabolized to inactive cortisone in the kidney

Requires enzyme, 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2

Rare inactivating mutation of 11B-HSD2 leads to syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess (AME)

Liquorice contains a compound that blocks this enzyme

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8
Q

What type of receptor do glucocorticoids bind to?

Describe the structure of these receptors

A

Member of the nuclear receptor super-family

Characteristic 3-domain structure:
Ligand-binding
DNA-binding (binds to HRE on genomic DNA)
N-terminal transcription cofactor-binding

Receptors dimerize on ligand binding and translocate to nucleus

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9
Q

What happens when a glucocorticoid binds to its receptor?

Transactivation

Transrepression

A

Transactivation: glucocorticoid receptor (GR) enhances transcription of target gene
Transrepression: GR represses transcription of target gene
Many anti-inflammatory effects of GCs thought to be due to transrepression – major therapeutic research target

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10
Q

What are the functions of glucocorticoids?

A

Decreased glucose utilization (glucose sparing)
- Proteolysis
- Gluconeogenesis (mainly from amino acids)
- Lipolysis
Overall: maintenance of blood glucose – essential for survival during fasting

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11
Q

How does glucocorticoids influence the CVS?

A
  1. Required for vascular integrity and maintenance of blood pressure
  2. hypocortisolism: inappropriate vasodilation, hypotension
  3. hypercortisolism: hypertension
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12
Q

How are glucocorticoids anti-inflammatory drugs and immunosuppressive?

A

60 years of GC therapy
Highly profitable industry
Extremely effective drugs
But it’s a double edged sword!

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13
Q

How can we get adrenal insufficiency?

Give an overview of Addison disease

A

Addison’s disease: primary adrenal insufficiency
Secondary (hypopituitarism; secondary to failure in RAAS)
Enzyme defect in steroid synthesis pathways

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14
Q

What does activation of ACTH receptors also cause?

What does this cause in Addison’s disease

A

Melanocyte receptors - epithelial cells - darkens the skin - protects from UV

Darkening of the skin

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15
Q

What is Cushing syndrome?

What causes Cushing’s syndrome?

A

Excess glucocorticoid

ACTH-dependent:
Cushing’s disease: due to increased ACTH secretion (typically due to pituitary adenoma: secondary)
Ectopic ACTH-secreting tumour

ACTH-independent:
Adrenal adenoma or carcinoma (primary)
Iatrogenic; effect of GC therapy

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16
Q

Describe the clinical features of Hypercortisolism

A
Hypertension 
Hyperglycaemia 
Truncal obesity
Fatigue, muscle weakness
Virilization (hirsutism in females)
Depression, mood or psychiatric disturbances
17
Q

What are the 2 steps involved in diagnosing hypercortisolism?

A

First step: confirm hypersecretion of cortisol
24-hour urinary cortisol
Cortisol at nadir of secretion (around midnight)

Next, determine the cause
Plasma ACTH
Dexamethosone suppression test

18
Q

Describe the feedback loop for Cushing syndrome

A

On image