Thyroid Hormone

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G1SG2

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TPR classifies thyroid hormone as a "peptide hormone." I know T3 and T4 are tyrosine based; however, from my understanding (and what I remember from EK), they act as steroids and act at the level of transcription. Could it be possible that TPR was referring to calcitonin? This is from the "MCAT Science Review Questions and Solutions" booklet from the hyperlearning course, btw.
 
TPR classifies thyroid hormone as a "peptide hormone." I know T3 and T4 are tyrosine based; however, from my understanding (and what I remember from EK), they act as steroids and act at the level of transcription. Could it be possible that TPR was referring to calcitonin? This is from the "MCAT Science Review Questions and Solutions" booklet from the hyperlearning course, btw.
Thyroid hormones are lipid-soluble amino acid (not peptide) hormones (unlike the catecholamines which are hydrophillic). This is a mistake.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thyroxine
 
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it is a peptide hormone (fine, technicially an amino acid derivative) but acts like a steroid. Hence that's why it's called the exception.
 
it is a peptide hormone (fine, technicially an amino acid derivative) but acts like a steroid. Hence that's why it's called the exception.

They're not the same thing. It's important in keeping the correct classification for hormones and neurotransmitters:

1. peptides
2. amino acid derivative/biogenic amines
3. steroid

amino acid derivatives are much smaller and have a different synthetic pathway because they're not transcribed/translated but built from the amino acid building block. this is a huge difference in terms of synthesis and control mechanisms.
 
they act LIKE steroids not AS steroids since they're not steroids and you pointed out 😉 LIKE steroids in the sense that they pass through membranes and bind to intranuclear receptors and affect transcription.
 
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