Where is the medulla of the thyroid gland?
Between the follicles
What does the medulla contain?
Neural crest- derived parafollicular C-cells that produce and release calcitonin
What triggers calcitonin release by C-cells?
Increased serum calcium
What is calcitonin?
32 aa protein enoded by a gene located on chromosome 11 p, which is also expressedi n other tissues as calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP, 37aa)
What is the function of CGRP?
Acts as both a neurotransmitter and vasodilator properties and is involved in completion of the process of testicular descent.
What is the main function of calcitonin?
Antagonize the effects of parathyroid (decrese bone resorption and increase renal calcium excretion)
What is a nutritional disorder related to hypercalcitoninemia?
High Ca-diet leading to mineral imbalance
What kind of cancer can hypercalcitoninemia lead to?
Thyroid Neoplasia (ex. medullary thyrid carcinoma in humans and ultimobranchial tumors in bulls)
How are ultimobranchial bodies affected by ultimobranchial tumors?
Ultimobranchial bodies fuse with the thyroid gland and are thought to develop into the parafollicular cells.
How is T3/T4 formed?
How is thyroglobulin synthesized?
T4 is much more potent than T3
FALSE - much less potent with a longer half life (5-7 days vs. 18 hours)
TH effects are chronic
TRUE - The biological effect of T3 is more rapid and requires 3 days for peak effect vs 11 days for T4
How is T3 activated?
T4 is converted to active T3 at target tissue by 5’-mono-deiodinase action.
How does T3 function?
After T4 goes through deiodination across the cell membrane, T3 binds to nuclear receptors and initiates transcription of a variety of proteins and enzymes
Overall effects of thyroid hormone
Increase metabolic rate and O2 consumption as well as many general effects in target audience
What causes deiodination?
Selenium-containing deiodinases are involved in T4 metabolism, thus dietary selenium is essential for active T3 production
What other proteins and hormones are created due to T3 binding to nuclear receptor and that bind to intracellular/nuclear receptors (aka transcription factors)?
What permissive effects are caused via nuclear receptor transcription factors?
Normal growth and development of bones and central nervous system
What intracellular effects occur due to the nuclear receptor?
Which leads to
What whole body effects occur due to increased O2 consumption and increased metabolic rate?
List symptoms of hyperthyroidism
List symptoms of hypothyroidism
List causes of hypothyroidism