The effects of mineralocorticoids are mediated by slow genomic mechanisms through
nuclear receptors as well as by fast nongenomic mechanisms through membrane-associated receptors and
signaling cascades. , showing mineralocorticoids in ellipse at top right. Note that it is not a strictly bounded group, but a continuum of structures with increasing mineralocorticoid effect, with the primary example aldosterone at top.
Genomic mechanisms Mineralocorticoids bind to the
mineralocorticoid receptor in the cell
cytosol, and are able to freely cross the
lipid bilayer of the cell. This type of
receptor becomes activated upon
ligand binding. After a hormone binds to the corresponding receptor, the newly formed
receptor-ligand complex translocates into the
cell nucleus, where it binds to many
hormone response elements (HREs) 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 (a
glucosteroid) 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. ==Pathophysiology==