L19 - The Thyroid Gland Flashcards
Describe in detail where the thyroid gland lies anatomically
Anterior to the cricoid cartilage, inferior to the thyroid cartilage (adams apple) around the front on the larynx
The thyroid gland is made up of two lobes joined by an isthmus, it is the first endocrine to develop embryologically. Explain how it develops briefly
Develops as an epithelial proliferation at the base of the tongue and descends down the thyroglossal duct to its final position
Follicular cells are arranged in spheres called thyroid follicles, they make and secrete thyroglobulin which is stored in an extracellular protein called?
Colloid
Thyroglobulin is an iodide dependent hormone, what do parafollucular cells secrete?
Calcitonin
Which cells are the small, purple cells surrounding the colloid and which cells are the clear ones interspersed between these
Small purple - follicular
Clear - parafollicular
The thyroid hormones are T3 and T4 which can be distinguished by the three of four attached iodine atoms. Thyroglobulin acts as a scaffold protein for the formation of thyroid hormones from its tyrosine residues (so it is sort of a precursor). What two processes are required to turn the residues into the hormones?
Iodination and coupling
What are the three processes whcih thyroid peroxidase regulates in Vivo?
Oxidation of iodide to iodine (from the diet)
Addition of iodine to the tyrosine residues on the thyroglobulin
Coupling of the MIT or DIT to generate the thyroid hormones
As we have seen dietary iodine is essential for thyroid hormone synthesis because it can’t be made in vivo. It is taken up from the bloodstream via the ‘iodine trap’ which is a sodium iodide . What percent of the bodies iodine does the thyroid gland contain?
95%
Although 90% of thyroid hormone secreted is T4 why are there still relatively high levels of T3?
Because most of T4 is converted to T3 by the liver and the kidneys. T3 is far more biologically active
Thyroid hormones are steroid hormones. How are they transported in the blood?
Bound to thyroxine binding globulin
What two/three processes do thyroid hormones have the most effect on?
metabolic stimulation (including increasing BMR) Heat production sympathimometic effects (by increasing receptor number of the catecholamines)
Note - so when thinking about problems with the hormone think about these processes
Specifically what kind of hormone is TSH?
A glycoproteins hormone
What is the trigger for thyroid hormone release explain the intracellular pathways involved
TSH binding to its GPCR (Gq or Gs) on follicular cells this stimulating release via pinocytosis
Gq pathway - PLC -> cleaves pip2 to IP3 and DAG. IP3 is a calcium channel so calcium release and PKC activation
Gs pathway - activation of adenyl cyclase which actives cAMP which activities protein kinase A
Describe the five major actions of thyroid hormone
1) Increase in basal metabolic rate
2) Stimulation of lipid and carbohydrate metabolism
3) sympathomimetic effects (increases number of catecholamine receptors)
4) increased cardiac output (Cos of 3)
5) essential for CNS development and function
Like other intracellular hormones thyroid bonds it’s receptor which removes it from the HRE thus stopping its repression of gene transcription. Are the normal circulating thyroid hormones in the nanomolar, picomolar or molar concentrations?
Picomolar