Richard I. G. Holt

Essential Endocrinology and Diabetes


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acromegaly and some autonomous thyroid nodules

       Loss of function

       V2 receptor: nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (high vasopressin)

       TSH receptor: resistance to TSH (high TSH)

       Gsα: pseudohypoparathyroidism (Figure 9.7) and Albright hereditary osteodystrophy

Photo depicts familial male precocious puberty. This 2-year-old presented with signs of precocious puberty. Note the musculature, pubic hair and inappropriately large size of the testes and penis.

      The receptors predominantly function in the nucleus. Nuclear import and export is a common and important regulatory mechanism by controlling access to target DNA binding sites in promoters and enhancers (Chapter 2). This shuttling is exemplified well by the glucocorticoid receptor (Figure 3.18).

      Target cell conversion of hormones destined for nuclear receptors

Photos depict McCune–Albright syndrome. At 6 years of age, this girl presented with breast development and vaginal bleeding in the absence of gonadotrophins. An activating mutation in Gsalpha had created independence from melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) causing skin pigmentation. The same mutation in the ovary had caused constitutive activation leading to premature breast development.

      From Brook’s Clinical Pediatric Endocrinology, Sixth Edition, Charles G. D. Brook, Peter E. Clayton, Rosalind S. Brown, Eds. Blackwell Publishing Limited. 2009.

Schematic illustration of the activation of protein kinase A, a cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The four-subunit complex is inactive. When cAMP binds to the regulatory subunits, dissociation occurs so that the active kinase subunits are released to catalyze the phosphorylation of the cAMP response element-binding protein.

      Nuclear localization, DNA binding and transcriptional activation

      Prior to hormone binding, the thyroid hormone receptor (TR) is located in the nucleus and can bind to DNA at the thyroid hormone response element (TRE). In the absence of hormone, the TR dimerizes with the retinoid X receptor and tends to recruit nuclear proteins that inhibit transcription (co‐repressors). Binding of thyroid hormone causes dissociation of these factors in favour of association with transcriptional co‐activators, and a sequence of events that results in the recruitment of DNA‐dependent RNA polymerase and gene transcription (Figure 3.20 and Figure 2.2).

      Orphan nuclear receptors and variant nuclear receptors