1. Physiology of the Adrenal GlandPhysiology of the Adrenal Gland
Adrenal cortex
-Anatomy review
-Synthesis of corticosteroids
-Glucocorticoids
-Mineralocorticoids
-Controlling system
-Renin-angiotensin system
Adrenal medulla and its hormones
-Synthesis and secretion
-Adrenergic receptors
-Physiologic effects
2. The adrenal glands are situated at the upper poles of each kidney
and consist of an outer cortex surrounding a central medulla
3. Adrenal cortex
•Has three histological zones
1. Zona glomerulosa (produces aldosterone, mineralocorticoid)
2. Zona fasciculata and
3. Zona reticularis (both produce glucocorticoids, cortisol and corticosterone) +
androgens (DHEA, DHEA sulfate)
•21 carbon atom compounds
- mineralocorticoid (aldosterone)
affects Na & K metabolism
- glucocorticoids (cortisol &
corticosterone) affect carbohydrate
and protein metabolism
•19 carbon atoms
- adrenal androgenes
4. •Synthesis of corticosteroids
Zona glomeruloza
Pregnenolone
Progesterone
11-Deoxycortico
sterone
Corticosterone
Aldosterone
Angiotensin II
(18-OH Corticosterone)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
Cholesterol
Pregnenolone
Progesterone
11-Deoxycorticosterone
Corticosterone
17-OH
Pregnenolone DHEA
Androstene-
dione
(2)
(1)
17-OH
Progesterone
(2)
11-Deoxy-cortisol
Cortisol
(3)
(4)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Zona fasciculata and
zona reticularis
Hormone synthesis in the adrenal cortex. The zona glomerulosa can not convert corticosterone to
cortisol. 1-5 indicate the enzymes responsible for hormone synthesis: 1) 17α-hydroxylase (lacking in
zona glomerulosa); 2) 3 β-dehydrogenase; 3) 21 β-hydroxylase; 4) 11 β-hydroxylase; 5) corticosterone
methyloxidase
5. •Glucocorticoids
- cortisol ~ 96% is bound to corticosteroid-
binding globulin (CBG) or transcortin
- a minor degree of binding to albumin
- ~ 4% is free (biologically active)
- corticosterone (secreted 1/10th amount
of cortisol)
•Plasma level follows circadian rhythm:
- highest between 4.00 – 8.00 am
- levels secondary to variation in ACTH and circadian rhythm of CRF
7. •Antigrowth effects:
- growth hormone and its action on somatic growth
- cause muscle atrophy and muscle weakness
- Ca absorption from the gut
- collagen formation osteoporosis and delayed wound healing
•Anti-inflammatory and anti-allergic effects:
- capillary permeability
- leucocyte migration
- number of lymphocytes, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils and histamine
release
- number of neutrophils, erythrocytes and platelets
•Stress adaptation:
- activates the hypothalamic-hypophyseal-adrenal axis
- has some mineralocorticoid action – retain Na and water
- exerts negative feedback effect at the level of CRF and ACTH secretion
8. Effects of mineralocorticoidEffects of mineralocorticoid
•Is essential for life
•Aldosterone exerts ~95% of mineralocorticoid effect
•The majority of aldosterone remains bound:
- to albumin
- the rest is bound to CBG
•Na retention by:
- absorption of Na in distal and collecting tubules of nephrons
- sweat glands
- salivary glands and
- GI mucosa
• K elimination
•Maintains ECF (extracellular fluid volume)
9. Hypothalamic-hypophyseal-adrenal axis (control system)Hypothalamic-hypophyseal-adrenal axis (control system)
•CRF (hypothalamus) ACTH (adenohypophysis)
adrenal cortex (ZG & ZF) Cortisol
• Cortisol CRF ACTH cortisol (negative
feedback)
•CRH-ACTH axis is activated by:
- severe trauma - hemorrhage
- burns - heavy exercise
- pyrogens - infection and fever
- hypoglycemia - chemical intoxication
- histamine - pain
- electrical shock - surgery
- anxiety - cold exposure
•Level of “free” cortisol acts on anterior pituitary and hypothalamus
by negative feedback
11. Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone (control system)Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone (control system)
•Renin, a proteolytic enzyme, secreted by juxtaglomerular cells (JG) of the
juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA)
•Baroreceptors and chemoreceptors of JGA are sensitive to:
- hypovolemia renin
- concentration of Na renin
•The renin-angiotensin system is also stimulated by:
- sympathetic nervous system renin
•Hypotension renin
•Aldosterone secretion is controlled by: ECF volume BP or Na
renin (JGA) angiotensin (plasma) angiotensin I
angiotensin II aldosterone (zona glomerulosa) [“converting enzyme”
converts ANG I to ANG II]
• K adrenal zona glomerulosa aldosterone
13. Clinical
•Addison’s disease (due to destruction of adrenal gland – autoimmune disease/
tuberculosis) – primary hypoadrenalism
• ACTH melanocyte activity pigmentation of the skin + buccal mucosa
•Secondary hypoadrenalism is due to: ACTH (pituitary damage)
•Features:
- weakness - anorexia
- loss of weight - abdominal pain
- loss of Na and water dehydration - hypercalcemia
- hypotension - hyperkalemia metabolic acidosis
- postural dizziness - anemia
- hypoglycemia - lymphocytosis
- vomiting - eosinophilia
- diarrhea
15. Adrenal Medullary HormonesAdrenal Medullary Hormones
•Cells in the adrenal medulla synthesize and secrete
epinephrine and norepinephrine.
•The ratio of these two catecholamines
differs considerably among species:
in humans, cats and chickens, roughly 80, 60 and 30% of the
catecholamine output is epinephrine.
•Following release into blood, these hormones bind adrenergic
receptors on target cells, where they induce essentially the same
effects as direct sympathetic nervous stimulation
17. Synthesis and Secretion of Catecholamines
Synthesis of catecholamines begins with the amino acid tyrosine, which is taken
up by chromaffin cells in the medulla and converted to norepinephrine and
epinephrine through the following steps:
Norepinephine and epinephrine are stored in electron-dense granules which also
contain ATP and several neuropeptides.
Secretion of these hormones is stimulated by acetylcholine release from preganglionic
sympathetic fibers innervating the medulla.
Many types of "stresses" stimulate such secretion, including exercise, hypoglycemia
and trauma. Following secretion into blood, the catecholamines bind loosely to and
are carried in the circulation by albumin and perhaps other serum proteins.
18. Adrenergic Receptors and Mechanism of Action
•The physiologic effects of epinephrine and norepinephrine are initiated by their
binding to adrenergic receptors on the surface of target cells.
•These receptors are prototypical examples of seven-pass transmembrane proteins
that are coupled to G proteins which stimulate or inhibit intracellular signalling
pathways.
19. Complex physiologic responses result from adrenal medullary stimulation because
there are multiple receptor types which are differentially expressed in different
tissues and cells.
The alpha and beta adrenergic receptors and their subtypes were
originally defined by differential binding of various agonists and antagnonists and,
more recently, by analysis of molecular clones.
Receptor Effectively Binds Effect of Ligand Binding
Alpha1 Epinephrine, Norepinphrine Increased free calcium
Alpha2 Epinephrine, Norepinphrine Decreased cyclic AMP
Beta1 Epinephrine, Norepinphrine Increased cyclic AMP
Beta2 Epinephrine Increased cyclic AMP
20. Physiologic Effects of Medullary Hormones
In general, circulating epinephrine and norepinephrine released from the
adrenal medulla have the same effects on target organs as direct stimulation
by sympathetic nerves, although their effect is longer lasting.
•Increased rate and force of contraction of the heart muscle: this is predominantly
an effect of epinephrine acting through beta receptors.
•Constriction of blood vessels: norepinephrine, in particular, causes widespread
vasoconstriction, resulting in increased resistance and hence arterial blood pressure.
•Dilation of bronchioles: assists in pulmonary ventilation.
•Stimulation of lipolysis in fat cells: this provides fatty acids for energy production
in many tissues and aids in conservation of dwindling reserves of blood glucose.
•Increased metabolic rate: oxygen consumption and heat production increase
throughout the body in response to epinephrine. Medullary hormones also promote
breakdown of glycogen in skeletal muscle to provide glucose for energy production.
•Dilation of the pupils.
•Inhibition of certain "non-essential" processes: an example is inhibition of
gastrointestinal secretion and motor activity.
Common stimuli for secretion of adrenomedullary hormones include exercise,
hypoglycemia, hemorrhage and emotional distress.