Steroids Flashcards
What is the difference between cortisol and prednisone?
- prednisone has much more corticosteroid
- prednisone = extra O bond in the A ring and O group instead of OH group in C ring
What are the 3 stages of stress?
- alarm: acute stress (6-48 hours)
- rapid decline in thymus, spleen, lymph glands
- disappearance of fat and loss of muscle - resistance: chronic stress (2 days - 1 month)
- adrenal glands are larger - exhaustion: pathogenic stress (>3 months)
What happens when cortisol exceeds its normal range?
suppression of the immune responses
What are unwanted effects of systemic glucocorticoids?
- oedema
- weight gain
- glycosuria
- osteoporosis
- hypertension
- glaucoma
- juvenile growth retardation
- hyperlipidaemia
- GI bleeding
- increased risk of infection
- HPA axis suppression
What is the result of cortisol overproduction?
Cushing syndrome peptic ulcer glaucoma osteoporosis avascular necrosis
Why can chronic use of corticosteroids cause osteoporosis?
corticosteroids suppresses osteoclast functions and osteoblast function, but osteoblast function is suppressed much more
What is the effect of glucocorticoids on carbohydrate metabolism?
hyperglycaemia - inhibition of insulin and stimulation of glucagon
What is the effect of glucocorticoids on lipid metabolism?
redistribution of body fat
= increased lipolysis by adipocytes
What is the effect of glucocorticoids on the cardiovascular system?
hypertension
What is the effect of glucocorticoids on the immune system?
immunosuppression:
- redistribution of leukocytes
- maintenance of lymphoid tissue
What is the effect of glucocorticoids on the skeletal system?
maintenance of muscular tone
What is the effect of glucocorticoids on CNS?
regulation of neuronal excitability
Where are glucocorticoids receptors found? What forms do these receptors come in?
found in the cytoplasm and nucleus of most cells
2 main forms:
1. alpha: bind steroids (777aa)
2. beta: does not bind steroids, binds DNA (742aa)
–> predominant form
*steroids bind to the C terminal of GRs
What are the genomic activities of glucocorticoid receptors?
- transactivation of gene transcription by direct interaction with DNA
- transrepression by interaction with other proteins in cytoplasm or nucleus
- -> corticosteroids can switch off the ability of TNF alpha to bind to promoter sequences that stimulate pro-inflammatory signals by bind to them and changing their affinity to these promotor regions
What are the non-genomic activities of glucocorticoid receptors?
- interaction of GC with plasma membrane GR –> signal to cytoplasmic GRs
- interaction of GC with cytoplasmic GR –> activated in the cytoplasm –> stimulates the SRC –> upregulation of transcription factors
- interaction of GC with membrane –> intercalate with membrane –> stop receptors moving together –> downregulates the cell’s function