Abstract

The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis is critical for life. It has a circadian rhythm that anticipates the metabolic, immunoregulatory and cognitive needs of the active portion of the day, and retains an ability to react rapidly to perceived stressful stimuli. The circadian variation in glucocorticoids is very ‘noisy’ because it is made up from an underlying approximately hourly ultradian rhythm of glucocorticoid pulses, which increase in amplitude at the peak of circadian secretion. We have shown that these pulses emerge as a consequence of the feedforward–feedback relationship between the actions of corticotrophin hormone (ACTH) on the adrenal cortex and of endogenous glucocorticoids on pituitary corticotrophs. The adrenal gland itself has adapted to respond preferentially to a digital signal of ACTH and has its own feedforward–feedback system that effectively amplifies the pulsatile characteristics of the incoming signal. Glucocorticoid receptor signalling in the body is also adapted to respond in a tissue-specific manner to oscillating signals of glucocorticoids, and gene transcriptional and behavioural responses depend on the pattern (i.e. constant or pulsatile) of glucocorticoid presentation. During major stressful activation of the HPA, there is a marked remodelling of the pituitary–adrenal interaction. The link between ACTH and glucocorticoid pulses is maintained, although there is a massive increase in the adrenal responsiveness to the ACTH signals.

Highlights

  • It is 65 years since Hans Selye [1] demonstrated the critical role of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis for life and the powerful effects of its response to stress

  • A further prediction from our mathematical models is that a stressor can induce phase shifts in the ultradian pattern, in effect acting as a resetting mechanism for the phase of the ultradian rhythm, and that the ability to respond to perturbations would be much greater under oscillatory rather than equilibrium conditions [64]

  • We have demonstrated that the adrenal gland has its own internal feedforward–feedback system that is able to effectively amplify the response to rapid changes of actions of corticotrophin hormone (ACTH) inherent in the pulsatile characteristics of the incoming signal

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Summary

REVIEW ARTICLE

The Importance of Biological Oscillators for HypothalamicPituitary-Adrenal Activity and Tissue Glucocorticoid Response: Coordinating Stress and Neurobehavioural Adaptation. L. Lightman Henry Wellcome Laboratories of Integrative Neuroscience and Endocrinology, School of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK

Journal of Neuroendocrinology
Introduction
Ultradian rhythm
Adrenal cortex
CORT pulse
Glucocorticoid ultradian rhythmicity and stress activation
Impact of rapidly changing levels of glucocorticoids on cognition
Conclusions
Findings
Disrupted glucocorticoid pulsatility and glucocorticoid resistance
Full Text
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