Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2196440 Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Circadian secretion of steroid hormones by the adrenal cortex is required to maintain whole body homeostasis and to adequately respond to or anticipate environmental changes. The richly vascularized zona glomerulosa (ZG) cells in the pericapsular region regulate osmotic balance of body fluid by secreting mineralocorticoids responding to circulating bioactive substances, and more medially located zona fasciculata (ZF) cells regulate energy supply and consumption by secreting glucocorticoids under neuronal and hormonal regulation. The circadian clock regulates both steroidogenic pathways: the clock within the ZG regulates mineralocorticoid production via controlling rate-limiting synthetic enzymes, and the ZF secretes glucocorticoid hormones into the systemic circulation under the control of central clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus. A functional biological clock at the systemic and cellular levels is therefore necessary for steroid synthesis and secretion.

► Steroid hormones are secreted in a circadian manner from the adrenal cortex. ► The circadian clock in the zona glomerulosa regulates mineralocorticoid production. ► Clock signals from the brain regulate glucocorticoids in the zona fasciculata. ► Both systemic and cellular clocks are necessary for adrenal hormone secretion.

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