TRH, or Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone, is a tripeptide hormone (meaning it’s made of three amino acids) produced by the hypothalamus — the brain’s master regulator of hormone activity.
Its main role is to stimulate the anterior pituitary gland to release TSH (Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone), which in turn stimulates the thyroid gland to produce thyroid hormones: T3 (triiodothyronine) and T4 (thyroxine).
🧠 How TRH Works: The HPT Axis (Hypothalamus–Pituitary–Thyroid Axis)
- The hypothalamus releases TRH into the hypophyseal portal system.
- TRH travels to the anterior pituitary gland.
- TRH binds to receptors on pituitary cells, prompting the release of TSH.
- TSH stimulates the thyroid gland to produce and release T3 and T4.
- T3 and T4 regulate metabolism, energy use, body temperature, and development.
🔁 Feedback Loop:
✅ Negative Feedback Control:
- When T3 and T4 levels are high, they inhibit further TRH and TSH release.
- When T3 and T4 are low, the hypothalamus releases more TRH to increase thyroid activity.
This loop helps maintain stable thyroid hormone levels in the body.
🧪 Clinical Relevance of TRH
✅ TRH Is Used For:
- TRH stimulation test: formerly used to assess pituitary or thyroid function (now largely replaced by simpler TSH and free T4 tests).
- Understanding causes of hypothyroidism (whether due to thyroid, pituitary, or hypothalamic issues)
🧠 TRH Also Affects:
- Prolactin release: TRH can mildly stimulate prolactin secretion, especially under certain conditions.
- Mood and sleep regulation (as a neurotransmitter in the brain, though these effects are less understood)
📉 Low TRH May Indicate:
- Hypothalamic dysfunction or damage
- Tertiary hypothyroidism (rare – when the thyroid underfunction is caused by the hypothalamus not making TRH)
📈 High TRH May Indicate:
- Low thyroid hormone levels (as a compensatory signal)
- Resistance to thyroid hormone or pituitary disorders causing overproduction of TSH
🧠 Summary Table:
Feature | TRH (Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone) |
---|---|
Produced by | Hypothalamus |
Acts on | Anterior pituitary |
Stimulates | Release of TSH (and slightly prolactin) |
Part of | HPT axis (thyroid regulation system) |
Controls | Thyroid function via TSH → T3/T4 hormone production |
Feedback control | Inhibited by high T3/T4; stimulated when low |
Clinical relevance | Assessed in hypothyroidism or pituitary testing |