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Corticotrophin Drug Class

Medicines in this drug class are grouped together in the Everyone Healthy medication database. This page is educational only and should not be used as personal prescribing advice.

Caution: A drug class groups medicines that may share similar actions or uses. Individual medicines in the same class can still have different cautions, interactions and suitability.

Drug class overview

Corticotrophin overview

Adrenocorticotropic hormone

Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), also known as corticotropin, is a polypeptide tropic hormone produced and secreted by the anterior pituitary gland. It is an important component of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and is often produced in response to biological stress (along with corticotropin-releasing hormone from the hypothalamus). Its principal effects are increased production of corticosteroids and, as its name suggests, cortisol from the adrenal cortex.

proopiomelanocortin (adrenocorticotropin/ beta-lipotropin/ alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone/ beta-melanocyte stimulating hormone/ beta-endorphin)
proopiomelanocortin derivatives
POMC
     
γ-MSH ACTH β-lipotropin
         
  α-MSH CLIP γ-lipotropin β-endorphin
       
    β-MSH  
Identifiers
Symbol POMC
Entrez 5443
HUGO 9201
OMIM 176830
RefSeq NM_000939
UniProt P01189
Other data
Locus Chr. 2 p23

 

Production and regulation

ACTH is synthesized from pre-pro-opiomelanocortin (pre-POMC). The removal of the signal peptide during translation produces the 267 amino acid polypeptide POMC, which undergoes a series of post-translational modifications such as phosphorylation and glycosylation before it is proteolytically cleaved by endopeptidases to yield various polypeptide fragments with varying physiological activity. These fragments include ACTH, β-lipotropin, γ-lipotropin, Melanocyte Stimulating Hormone (MSH) and β-endorphin. POMC, ACTH and β-lipotropin are secreted from corticotropes in the anterior lobe (or adenohypophysis) of the pituitary gland in response to the hormone corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) released by the hypothalamus.[1]

In order to regulate the secretion of ACTH, many substances secreted within this axis exhibit slow/intermediate and fast feedback-loop activity. Glucocorticoids secreted from the adrenal cortex work to inhibit CRH secretion by the hypothalamus, which in turn decreases anterior pituitary secretion of ACTH. Glucocorticoids may also inhibit the rates of POMC gene transcription and peptide synthesis. The latter is an example of a slow feedback loop, which works on the order of hours to days, while the former works on the order of minutes.

ACTH is also related to the circadian rhythm in many organisms. The half-life of ACTH in human blood is about ten minutes.

Structure

ACTH consists of 39 amino acids, the first 13 of which (counting from the N-terminus) may be cleaved to form α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH). (This common structure is excessively tanned skin.) After a short period of time, ACTH is cleaved into α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH) and CLIP, a peptide with unknown activity in humans.

Human ACTH has a molecular weight of 4,540 atomic mass units (Da).[2]

Function

ACTH acts through the stimulation of cell surface ACTH receptors, which are primarily located on adrenocortical cells of the adrenal cortex. This results in the synthesis and secretion of gluco- and mineralo-corticosteroids, and androgenic steroids. The ACTH receptor is a seven membrane-spanning G-protein coupled receptor. Upon ligand binding, the receptor undergoes conformation changes that stimulate the enzyme adenylyl cyclase, which leads to an increase in intracellular cAMP and subsequent activation of protein kinase A. This ultimately results in stimulation of steroidogenesis.

ACTH acts at several key steps to influence the steroidogenic pathway in the adrenal cortex:

  • ACTH stimulates lipoprotein uptake into cortical cells. This increases the bio-availability of cholesterol in the cells of the adrenal cortex.
  • ACTH increases the transport of cholesterol into the mitochondria and activates its hydrolysis.
  • ACTH Stimulates cholesterol side-chain cleavage enzyme, which makes the rate-limiting step in steroidogenesis.[3] This results in the production of pregnenolone.
Reference ranges for blood tests, showing adrenocorticotropic hormone (green at left) among the hormones with smallest concentration in the blood.

Synthetic ACTH

An active synthetic form of ACTH, consisting of the first 23 amino acids of native ACTH, was first synthesized by Klaus Hofmann at the University of Pittsburgh.[4] ACTH is available as a synthetic derivative in the forms of cosyntropin, tradename Cortrosyn and synacthen (synthetic ACTH). Both are very rarely used in place of glucocorticoids to treat secondary adrenal insufficiency in a hospital setting, but are primarily used to conduct the ACTH stimulation test.

ACTH was first synthesized as a replacement for Acthar Gel, a long-lasting animal product. Once relatively inexpensive, it is currently an extremely expensive pharmaceutical product. Prices per vial have been as high as $47,000.

Associated conditions

See also

References

  1. ^ "Adrenocorticotropic Hormone (ACTH)". http://www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/pathphys/endocrine/hypopit/acth.html. 
  2. ^ PROOPIOMELANOCORTIN; NCBI --> POMC Retrieved on September 28, 2009
  3. ^ Mechanism of ACTH action on adrenal cortical cells Andrew N. Margioris, M.D., and Christos Tsatsanis, Ph.D. Updated: December 4, 2006
  4. ^ "Simulated ACTH". Time. December 12, 1960. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,871916,00.html.

Linked medicines

0 medicines in this class

No linked medicines were found for this drug class in the detected link table. The drug class exists, but the drug-class-to-medicine link table may need a table-name or column-name adjustment.