Adrenal gland
From Iusmphysiology
Revision as of 21:06, 21 March 2011 by 149.166.24.125 (Talk)
- continued here from Endocrine control mechanism on 03/02/11 at 11:11AM.
Contents
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[edit] Adrenal glands
[edit] Objectives
[edit] Anatomy
- Next to the kidneys = "ad" "renal"
- Have great blood supply so they can be signaled and release their signals.
- Plumbing is different on the left and right sides.
[edit] Histology
- Two basic parts: cortex and medulla.
- Cortex:
- mesodermal orgin which makes sense because the mesoderm is generally found on the outside of the internal organs and the cortex is the outside part of the adrenal gland
- Zona glomerulosa
- Zona fasciculata
- Zona reticularis
- GoFaRM = glomerulosa, fasciculata, reticularis, medulla
- Medulla is in the middle of the organ
- Ectodermal origin which makes sense because it controls the catecholamines which are kind of nervous system like in the way they signal and the ectoderm makes the nervous system.
- Cats: epi, NE
- Cortex on the outside of the whole organ
[edit] Cortex
- Part of the HPA axis (hypo, pit, adrenal)
- Hypo makes CRH which is a positive secretory portal hormone
- Corticotropes in pit make ACTH
- ACTh has several roles on adrenal:
- Causes growth
- Causes changes in what the adrenal cells synthesize
- Causes overgrowth in disease states
- ACTH can be high when feedback loops are broken
- I.e. cortisol not feeding back on hypo or pit, perhaps.
- Separate types of feedback loops
- More when we talk about growth hormone.
[edit] Corticotropin releasing hormone
- CRF = CRH
- CRF is a small peptide that binds receptors on pituitary cells, namely the corticotropes.
- Promotes POMC production in corticotropes of pit
- ACTH generated from the POMC gene
- ACTH is a 39 aa peptide
- ACTH is also known as corticotropin
- ACTH affects the steroidogenic cells of the adrenal gland, especially the fasciculata and the reticularis.
- NOTE: ACTH has less affect on the glomerulosa than the other two layers of the cortex.
[edit] ACTH
- Hits target in cortex of adrenal.
- Binds to an MC2R (receptor) on the cells of the cortex layers.
- ACTH activates cAMP pathways via the MC2R receptor.
[edit] Zones of the adrenal gland
- Glomerulosa
- Makes adlosterone and deoxycorticosterone
- Responds to reinin-angiotensin
- Fasciculata
- Makes cortisol and corticosterone
- Resonds to ACTH
- Reticularis
- Makes Adrostendione and DHEA
- Responds to ACTH
- Reticularis and fasciculata will atrophy if pit is removed (because they respond to ACTH!).
- All these products of these three zones are steroids.
- Will not be tested on structure of steroids versus sterol.
- Medulla
- Makes CATS, mostly epi (adrenaline), some NE
[edit] Zone histology
- There is discrete histology
- Think of things as flowing stuff through the area
- If an enzyme is missing, things flow in the other direction.
[edit] Stress and the adrenals
- Short term stress: Cats
- Long term stress: Corticosteroids via ACTH and the mineralocorticoids (glomerulosa, not via ACTH)
[edit] Steroidogenesis
- Structures are for help, not tested.
- He likes this diagram b/c it is layered with the layers: glomerulosa, fasciculata, and reticularis. ("layerd version")
- Estradiol and test are not made at significant amounts in the adrenal.
- Mostly DHEA is made and put in blood
- Test and est made elsewhere.
[edit] Glucocorticoids (cortisol)
- Cortisol is the major glucocorticoid made in humans.
- Released in circadian rhythm
- Go example of thinking about cycles when measuring hormones in pts.
- Stress is a major player in cortisol release
- via CRH-ACTH axis
- A hormone carried in blood by binding proteins.
- Corticoseteroid binding globulin (CBG)
- Albumin
- Transcortin
- Glucocorticoids bind on glucocorticoid receptors, then HSPs then homodimerize to go into the nucleus to be a txn factor.
- Txn factors work with partner prots to affect txn.
- for cortisol, GR does not work direclty with partner proteins.
[edit] Cortisol effects on various systems
- Acts on many, many tissues.
- Read this, know this.
- Most effects are "permissive"
[edit] Mineralocorticoids (aldosterone)
- Made by zona glomerulosa
- This makes sense because aldosterone acts at the kidney and the kidney has glomerula.
- Aldosterone is the major one
- Effects:
- Increases interstitial Na (at the kidney); increases water retention
- Decreases K+ and H+ (at the kidney)
[edit] Regulation
- Read this
[edit] Pathway
- Study this, he went really fast.
- Aldosterone binds to cytoplasmic minteralocorticoid recetpors, uses HSPs, homodimersizes, etc.
- Causes Na to be retained.
[edit] Metabolism of adrenal steroids
- You have to make hormone action discrete so we control half-life and such.
- Body has two mechanisms:
- Modifications to inactivate
- Modifications to increase solubility
- Allows loss at urine
- Done by adding sugar groups, etc.
- Metabolites can be key diagnositic tools
- Can help identify tumors
[edit] A non-receptor mechanism...
- Enzymes that convert excessive glucocorticoids into non-responsive, non-MR binders gives us a way to control signaling if there's too much aldosterone.
[edit] Androgens
- Major forms are adrostendione and DHEA
- These are not present much in the adrenals b/c they are produced where blood flow in the adrenal exits.
[edit] Adrenarche
- Androgens (and therfore the reticularis) are important for driving adrenarche.
- This helps develop: pubic hair, auxillary hair, acne, and adult body odor.
- one disease term is virulization; means that there is an excess of androgens and this axis is elevated
[edit] Adrenal diseases
- Can be of excess or of insufficiency.
[edit] Addison's disease
- JFK had Addison's disease.
- Adrenocortico insufficiency:
- Too little cortisol being produced
- Primary Cause:
- Autoimmune
- Infectious
- Secondary cause
- Pit doesn't make enough ACTH
- 1 in 100K so rare
- Presentation:
- Low cortisol
- hypoglycemia
- high ACTH
- b/c no feedback:
- could lead to adrenal hypertrophy,
- could lead to odd coloring b/c it increases ACTH which has the sequence of the MSH hormone so it can activate the MSHr
- b/c no feedback:
- high sex hormone precursors like ADHEA.
- Loss of the aldosterone axis
[edit] Adrenal insufficiency
- This diagram explains how to differentially diagnose adrenal issues.
- It's a function of the ACTH and Cortisol levels
- When ACTH is low...
- If cortisol is low...
- Adrenal insufficiency occurs in pit in the 2nd and 3rd from the left.
[edit] Cushing's syndrome
- Diseases of excess of cortisol
- Could be an adrenal tumor making too much cortisol.
- Causes really low ACTH b/c lots of feedback on the Pit
- An umbrella term for overproduction of cortisol
- If it is a pit ACTH-producing tumor, then it is the disease.
- Primary is adrenocorticol carcinoma or adenoma
- Can also be caused by excessive exogenous glucocorticoids
- And when stopped suddenly can cause an acute form of Addison's disease
[edit] Cushing's disease
- A specific form of Cushing's syndrome.
- Also known as Secondary cushing's syndrome
- Tumor of the pit that makes ACTH
- Similar outcome to syndrome (too much cortisol)
- Can tell the diff b/c ACTH is high.
- Presentation:
- Key are high bp and high blood sugar.
- Recall that these are all caused by high levels of cortisols
[edit] Other
- Other tumors (in other parts of the body) that make ACTH or something that mimics ACTH.
- "Ectopic ACTH secretion"
- A certain rare type of lung cancer does this.
[edit] Hypoaldosteronism
- These pts usually present with hyperkalemia and hyponatremia.
- Recall that aldosterone acts at the kidneys to cause Na (and H20) retention and to excrete K and H+.
- Also have orthostatic hypotension.
- This makes sense because if they don't retain enough Na and H20 then they will become hypovolemic and thus when they stand their cerebral blood pressure will drop.
- He won't test us on enzyme names in the flow chart of steroid production.
[edit] Primary aldosteronism
- Conn syndrome
- Production of aldosterone-producing adenoma.
See slide
[edit] Congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- Babies tested at birth.
- Deficiency of certain steroid synthesis enzymes
- Low cortisol
- High ACTH b/c of low feedback
- Can be high androgens (not always though)
- 1:16k, thus tested
- Enzymes:
- The enzyme missing affects the outcome
- He named four major classes
- Outcomes by outcome of deficiency:
- Low mineralocorticoids
- Vomiting due to salt wasting, dehydration, death
- Na is not retained, water is lost.
- Low mineralocorticoids
Why would vomitting occur because of salt wasting?
- Excess mineralocoriticoids
- Hypertension (Na retained, water retained)
- Get the others.
- Excess mineralocoriticoids
[edit] 21-hydroxylase deficiency
- 90% of CAH cases are this.
- Prevalent in Askanazi jews.
- Salt wasting
- Low cortisols
- High levels of androgen precursors
- Leads to virulization
[edit] 11-beta hydroxylase deficiency
- Stops cortisol
- build up of DHEA
- You can make DOC, though, which can have corticosteroid affects.
- Causes low-renin hypertension.
- more rare
[edit] 17-hydroxylase defciency
- Got confused, read about it, see email.
- "I mislabeled the diagram – 17 hydroxylase is enzyme 3a not 3b – therefore low androgens and cortisol result. You can get high levels of DOC and therefore hypertension and hypokalemia. Due to the renin control system, aldosterone levels are not high."
- The most rare.
[edit] 3-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase II
- Low androgen, cortisol, and mineralocorticoids
- Causes....
[edit] Catecholamine deficiencies
- Adrenal medulla can be seen as modified part of autonomic nervous system.
- Fight or flight.
- Cells are anlogous to autonomic postganglionic symp fibers.
- main homrons are adrenaline and nor-adrenaline
- From tyrosine
- Main ring is a catechol
- Which is made is determined by which enzymes are present.
- Cells usually make one or the other, not both.
- The enzyemes are methyl-transferases.
- Use folate?
- Made by chromaffin cells
- Granules are produced that hold the cats
- Can be released rapidly.
- 80% adrenaline, 20% noradrenaline.
[edit] Signaliing
- Adrennergic receptors
- Alpha
- Interact with epi and norepi
- Beta
- More specific for epi
- Beta blockers
- Alpha
- Pathways:
- Alpha 1 is main positive signal
- alpha 2 is a feedback and has some negative actions
- Major actions; read them.
- Metabolism:
- We look for vanillic acid
- A biproduct is vanillymandelic acid
- found in urine for "certain diseases"
- We look for vanillic acid
- medullary dysfunction
- Hypofunction: orthostatic hypotnesion, low blood pressure, etc.
- Often due to surgery to remove entire adrenal
- Hyperfucntion:
- Could be due to tumors or ectomic tumors (phaeochromocytomas)
- Produces too much catecolamines
- Often given blockers of adrenergic receptors
- Elevated HR, bp, palpitations, sweating, headaches, psychiatric symptoms (religious delusions), et cetera.
- Manic symptoms
- Could be due to tumors or ectomic tumors (phaeochromocytomas)
- Hypofunction: orthostatic hypotnesion, low blood pressure, etc.
- stopped here on 03/02/11 at 12PM.