Thyroid Metabolic Hormones Flashcards
What are the 2 major metabolic hormones secreted by the thryoid?
- Thyroxine (T4)
- Triiodothyronine (T3)
Also secretes calcintonin
Describes the steps in thyroid hormone synthesis and excretion.
- Iodide trapping. Na/Iodide symporter on the basal membrane
- oxidation to Iodine via peroxidase/ hydrogen peroxide on the apical border
- synthesis of thyroglobulin by Golgi, secreted into the colloid
- Organification, Iodination and coupling –> binds to the tyrosine within the thyroglobulin to form monoiodotyrosine and diioiodotyrosine
- DIT x 2 = T4, DIT + MIT = T3
- pintocytosis back in the follicular cell
- fusion with lysosome –> protease reaction –> T4, T3, released into blood stream via exocytosis
MIT and DIT are deiodinated in the follicle by deiodinase, free iodine is reused
What is the most common form of thyroid hormone released from the thyroid?
T4
Which form of the thyroid hormone is more metabolically acitve?
T3, protein binding is not as tight as T4 and has higher affinity to receptors
What’s the common substrate bounded to thyroglobunlin?
MIT and DIT (2/3),
How is thyroid hormone transported in the bloodstream?
The majority are bound to protein, esp thyroxine-binding globulin, also albumin
- 99.9% of T4 is bound, 99% of T3 is bound
- only free thyroid hormone is taken up by the tissues
Does alteration of the thyroxine-binding globulin influence free hormone leve?
No
negative feedback loop
What are some physiological function of the thyroid hormone?
Most T4 will be converted to T3 in the target cells.
- T3 bind with nuclear receptors
- influence transcription of genes
How does thyroid hormone influence cellular metabolic activity?
- increase oxygen consumption
- increase heat
- increase # and size of mitochondria
- increases key respiratory enzyme activities
- increase Na/K ATPase activity –> increases heat
What are the effects of thyroid hormones on growth?
- required for normal growth and development
An increase in metabolic rate due to thyroid hormone can lead to:
- thermogenesis/ sweating
- increased rate and depth of respiration
- increased cardiac output: increase in metabolism leads to local vasodilation
- increased pulse pressure but no mean arterial pressure
- increased utilization of substrate for energy (lipid, carbohydrate, protein), decreasing circulating levels of cholesterol
- increased requirements for vitamins
- increased gastric motility
How is thyroid hormone regulated?
- TSH = primary controller
- binding of TSH to cell membrane –> activates adenylyl cyclase –> cAMP
- immediate effect is to promote endocytosis of thyroglobulins, release of T3/T4 into the bloodstream
- TSH also stimulates steps in thyroid hormone synthesis
What is the best known stimuli for TSH secretion?
cold!