L12: Corticosteroids Flashcards
What is inflammation?
The body’s immune response to an irritant which can be a germ (infection like bacteria or viruses), but also a foreign object like a splinter, injuries like bruises also cause inflammation.
What is the purpose of inflammation?
- Defence mechanism in higher organisms to prevent infection and injury
- In case of injury: Localize and eliminate injurious agent and remove damaged tissue components so that the body can begin to heal and so that it doesn’t interfere with normal body function.
What changes occur during inflammation?
Change in blood flow, increase in blood vessel permeability, migration of fluid, change of proteins in the body. White blood cells (leukocytes): mast cells, macrophages, and neutrophils from the circulation travel to the site of injury. They’re all recruited to work together to heal the injured part
What do corticosteroid drugs do?
Corticosteroids are a class of drugs that lower inflammation in the body, reduce immune system activity (immunosuppressants), ease swelling, itching, redness, and allergic reactions. Doctors often prescribe them to help treat diseases like asthma or arthritis.
What is a steroid?
A biologically active organic compound with four rings (can be different in different steroids) arranged in a specific molecular configuration.
What are the two principle functions of steroids?
- Important component of cell membranes which can alter membrane fluidity.
- Signalling molecules.
What are corticosteroids? What are the 2 groups?
Any of a group of steroid hormones produced in the adrenal cortex or made synthetically. There are two kinds: glucocorticoids and mineralocorticoids.
What is a mineralocorticoid? Give an example.
Class of corticosteroids produced in the adrenal cortex that influences salt and water balance (electrolyte in fluid balance). A primary example is aldosterone.
What is the immune response to stress?
Stress in the body causes pain which induces the hypothalamus to release hormones that stimulate the adrenal gland. The adrenal gland releases corticosteroids which can reduce inflammation and pain.
What is the endocrine system?
The endocrine system is the circuit board of the body through which cells communicate. It’s a complex network of glands and organs. It uses hormones to control and coordinate your body’s metabolism, energy level, reproduction, growth and development, and response to injury, stress, inflammation (reduce inflammation), and mood.
What is autocrine signalling?
cell produces a ligand which interacts with a receptor on the same cell.
What is paracrine signalling?
Cell’s ligand interacts with a receptor on a nearby cell.
What is endocrine signalling?
Cell’s chemical messenger (hormone) circulates in the body and has an effect on specific receptors on distant cells via the circulation.
What are the major components of the endocrine system?
- Brain
- Hypothalamus and pituitary (make hormones)
- Target organs (thyroid and parathyroid, pancreas, adrenal glands, ovaries, testes, etc)
What is the pathway for the release of cortisol?
- stress, illness, hypoglycemia, or hemmorhage on hypothalamus
- release of CRH (corticotropin releasing hormone) from hypothalamus
- CRH stimulates release of ACTH (adrenocorticotropic hormone) from pituitary.
- ACTH stimulates release of cortisol from adrenals
- Cortisol inhibits the hypothalamus and the pituitary from releasing their hormones. Therefore, a decrease in cortisol. Negative feedback loop.
How is the hypothalamus stimulated? What does it release?
The hypothalamus gets a signal from higher neural centres in response to altered plasma levels of the hormones or other substances. It releases corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH).
What is CRH? How is it activated?
CRH is a pro-hormone produced in the hypothalamus (a 41 amino acid peptide). To activate it, amino acids are cleaved. This is a way to control regulation.
Describe the stimulation of the anterior pituitary. What are the levels of control?
Corticotropin-releasing hormone acts on G protein-coupled receptors in the anterior pituitary to stimulate POMC synthesis, which is processed to release adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), and beta-LPH. ACTH is released from corticotropin-releasing cells in the anterior pituitary
The levels of control are:
- Turning on the synthesis of a protein (increasing expression)
- Post-translational processing so you can tightly control how much of the active messenger / protein is produced.
What is the role of ACTH?
- Increases the delivery of cholesterol to the inner mitochondrial membrane.
- Increases the transcription of steroidogenic enzymes.
Where are the adrenal glands? What are the different sections?
The adrenal glands are sitting on top of the kidneys.
The adrenal glands are composed of the cortex (outer layer) and the medulla (inner layer).
How does ACTH affect the adrenal glands?
ACTH binds to its receptors in the adrenal cortex. ACTH regulates glucocorticoid synthesis in the adrenal cortex (in zona fasciculata and zona reticularis).