Dictionary Definition
mineralocorticoid n : hormone that is one of the
steroids of the adrenal cortex that influences the metabolism of
sodium and potassium
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- Any of a group of steroid hormones, characterised by their similarity to aldosterone and their influence on salt and water metabolism.
Extensive Definition
Mineralocorticoids are a class of steroid hormones characterised by their
similarity to aldosterone and their
influence on salt and water
balance.
Physiology
The name mineralocorticoid derives from early observations that these hormones were involved in the retention of sodium, a mineral. The primary endogenous mineralocorticoid is aldosterone, although a number of other endogenous hormones (including progesterone and deoxycorticosterone) have mineralocorticoid function.Aldosterone acts on the kidneys to provide active
reabsorption of sodium
and an associated passive reabsorption of water, as well as the active
secretion of potassium
in the principal cells of the cortical collecting
tubule and active secretion of protons via proton ATPases in the
lumenal membrane of the
intercalated cells of the collecting
tubule. This in turn results in an increase of blood
pressure and blood
volume.
Aldosterone is produced in the cortex of the
adrenal
gland and its secretion is mediated principally by angiotensin
II, but also by adrenocorticotrophic
hormone (ACTH) and local potassium levels.
Mode of Action
Mineralocorticoids bind to the cytosolic mineralocorticoid receptor. This type of receptor gets activated upon ligand binding. After a hormone binds to the corresponding receptor, the newly formed receptor-ligand complex tes itself into the cell nucleus, where it binds to many hormone response elements (HRE) in the promoter region of the target genes in the DNA.The opposite mechanism is called transrepression. The
hormone
receptor without ligand binding interacts with heat
shock proteins and prevents the transcription
of targeted genes.
Aldosterone and cortisol have similar affinity
for the mineralocorticoid receptor however, glucocorticoids
circulate at roughly 100 times the level of mineralocorticoids. An
enzyme exists in mineralocorticoid target tissues to prevent
overstimulation by glucocorticoids. This enzyme,
11-beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type II (Protein:HSD11B2),
catalyzes the deactivation of glucocorticoids to 11-dehydro
metabolites. Licorice is known
to be an inhibitor of this enzyme and chronic consumption can
result in a condition known as pseudohyperaldosteronism.
18 hydroxy 11 deoxycorticosterone (also
designated 18OH-DOC) is a steroid hormone probably used to conserve
sodium and stimulate
hydrogen
ion (or acid) excretion. 18OH-DOC lowers urine pH but has no
affect on potassium
excretion. This would seem to indicate that 18OH-DOC's primary
purpose is to stimulate hydrogen ion or ammonium excretion. Under low
sodium intake 18 OH DOC is increased in serum. There is a marked
increase in serum 18OH DOC after injection of insulin and this may
be due to the hypokalemic (low serum
potassium) tendency after a rise in insulin which in turn would
make the serum more acidic. Since 18OH-DOC lowers urine pH
(increases acidity) but has no affect on potassium excretion, this
would seem to indicate that 18OH-DOC's primary purpose is to
stimulate hydrogen ion or ammonium excretion. Its use by the body
to conserve potassium would be indirect by virtue of hydrogen ion's
interference with potassium excretion. This interference is further
indicated because injecting sodium bicarbonate or even
hyperventilating (breathing rapidly beyond need) can triple
potassium excretion. The daily rhythm for potassium and hydrogen
ion excretion show a rather close inverse relationship, which gives
additional circumstantial support to the supposition that they
compete at a common site. 18OH-DOC is strongly dependent on the
potassium cell or plasma content, because in potassium deficient
rats markedly less 18OH-DOC is converted to 18OH-corticosterone and
less yet if sodium is deficient.
ACTH (a peptide
hormone) has a large affect on 18OH DOC, causing 18OH DOC to go
down to zero when ACTH does. This could be for the primary purpose
of keeping serum immune enzymes and cell fluids at a high pH (alkaline) during
internal infection, but not doing so during the intestinal
infection of diarrhea, during which disease the resulting
dehydration forces ACTH to decline. It probably is important
normally to keep the vacuoles where pathogens are digested at a
high pH because if the pH or alkalinity is not high enough, the
pathogens inside the immune cells are not digested and thus
released intact. So when an intestinal disease is not calling for
ACTH to decline, the indirect potassium conserving attribute of
18OH-DOC by virtue of stimulating acid excretion would be valuable,
as would also increased acid excretion during internal disease be
valuable.
18OH DOC may act primarily by blocking
aldosterone's effect on potassium, and must have aldosterone to assist it
with sodium. Nichols, et al, have been able to show that injection
of 18OH-DOC, which raised blood levels of this hormone ten times,
were more retentive of sodium than a similar amount of aldosterone.
So there must be a synergism involved. At the same time, the ratio
of sodium to potassium excretion declined very little for 18OH-DOC,
while for aldosterone, the ratio fell to as little as 1/3 that of
control men. This implies a considerable sparing of potassium by
18OH-DOC. Urine potassium excretion is not altered by 18OH-DOC
injection.
Angiotensin II has very little effect on 18OH-DOC
and is ambiguous nor does serum potassium above 4.8 mEq/litter (187
mg). This last is not surprising since 18OH-DOC should not be used
by the body at high serum potassium. Under low sodium intake,
18OH-DOC rises in the serum. ACTH causes a marked increase in
18OH-DOC, probably by a generalized affect on the zona
fasciculata of the adrenal
cortex where 18OH-DOC is synthesized. So when it is necessary
for sodium to be unloaded during the dehydration induced decline of
ACTH during diarrhea in order to preserve osmotic pressure, the
resulting 18OH-DOC decline would assist in this.
18OH-DOC is deeply involved in one of the three
forms (at least) of hypertension (high blood
pressure).
Pathophysiology
Hyperaldosteronism (the syndrome caused by elevated aldosterone) generally results from adrenal neoplasms. The two main resulting problems:- Hypertension and edema due to excessive Na+ and water retention.
- Accelerated excretion of potassium ions. With extreme K+ loss there is muscle weakness and eventually paralysis.
Underproduction, or hypoaldosteronism, leads to
the salt-wasting state associated with Addison's
disease, although classical
congenital adrenal hyperplasia and other disease states may
also cause this situation.
Pharmacology
An example of synthetic mineralocorticoids is fludrocortisone (Florinef). Important mineralocorticoid inhibitors are spironolactone and eplerenone.Notes
mineralocorticoid in German:
Mineralokortikoid
mineralocorticoid in French:
Minéralocorticoïde
mineralocorticoid in Hebrew:
מינרלוקורטיקואידים
mineralocorticoid in Hungarian:
Mineralokortikoid
mineralocorticoid in Macedonian:
Минералокортикоиди
mineralocorticoid in Norwegian:
Mineralkortikoid
mineralocorticoid in Polish:
Mineralokortykoid
mineralocorticoid in Portuguese:
Mineralocorticóide
mineralocorticoid in Russian:
Минералокортикоиды
mineralocorticoid in Chinese:
盐皮质激素