Cortisol is a glucocorticoid steroid hormone involved in stress adaptation, glucose regulation, inflammatory signaling, circadian physiology, cardiovascular support, and coordination of whole-body metabolic responses during physical and psychological demand. The hormone functions as one of the central regulators of survival physiology by helping maintain energy availability during fasting, infection, inflammation, exercise, emotional stress, and environmental challenge.
Cortisol increases hepatic gluconeogenesis, mobilizes amino acids from skeletal muscle, supports fatty acid release from adipose tissue, and helps maintain stable blood glucose levels during periods of increased metabolic demand. The hormone also contributes to vascular responsiveness, electrolyte balance, immune signaling regulation, connective tissue remodeling, and nervous-system adaptation. Through these coordinated actions, cortisol influences nearly every major organ system.
One of the important endocrine interactions involving cortisol is its relationship with growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-1 pathways. Cortisol helps regulate hepatic responsiveness to growth hormone and can contribute to stimulation of IGF-1 production under certain physiological conditions. IGF-1 is a powerful anabolic signaling hormone that promotes cellular growth, protein synthesis, tissue repair, and proliferation signaling. In healthy physiology, this interaction supports growth, recovery, metabolic adaptation, and maintenance of connective tissue and muscle integrity.
However, excessive or chronically elevated IGF-1 signaling is associated with increased stimulation of cellular proliferation pathways including PI3K-AKT-mTOR signaling systems that influence cell growth and survival. In cancer biology, elevated IGF-1 signaling has been associated with enhanced proliferation, survival signaling, angiogenesis, and resistance to programmed cell death in multiple tumor environments. Increased IGF-1 activity may support growth signaling in hormone-sensitive and metabolically active cancer cells through stimulation of mitogenic and anti-apoptotic pathways. Cortisol-related endocrine imbalance, chronic stress physiology, metabolic dysfunction, and persistent inflammatory signaling may therefore influence broader endocrine environments connected with growth-related signaling pathways.
Cortisol is produced primarily within the zona fasciculata of the adrenal cortex from cholesterol through steroidogenic enzyme pathways involving pregnenolone, progesterone intermediates, 17-hydroxylase activity, and 11-beta-hydroxylase conversion systems. The adrenal glands synthesize cortisol continuously according to circadian timing and physiological demand.
Production follows strong circadian rhythmicity with highest secretion generally occurring during the early morning and gradual decline throughout the day. Physical stress, emotional stress, inflammation, infection-related signaling, trauma, fasting, intense exercise, hypoglycemia, and sleep disruption can all substantially increase secretion. Adrenocorticotropic hormone from the anterior pituitary acts as the major stimulatory signal controlling adrenal cortisol synthesis.
Cortisol secretion is regulated mainly through the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Corticotropin-releasing hormone from the hypothalamus stimulates release of ACTH from the anterior pituitary, which then activates cortisol synthesis within the adrenal cortex. Elevated circulating cortisol suppresses both CRH and ACTH secretion through negative feedback regulation.
The hormone acts through intracellular glucocorticoid receptor systems linked to transcriptional regulation, inflammatory-response pathways, glucose-metabolism signaling, mitochondrial adaptation, circadian regulatory systems, and endocrine communication networks. Cortisol signaling influences hepatic metabolism, skeletal muscle protein turnover, adipose tissue lipolysis, immune-cell signaling, vascular responsiveness, and neurological adaptation pathways.
Sleep quality, chronic psychological stress, inflammatory cytokines, autonomic nervous-system activation, nutrient availability, circadian disruption, and metabolic status strongly influence cortisol secretion dynamics. Through these integrated endocrine systems, cortisol coordinates stress adaptation, metabolic flexibility, glucose homeostasis, inflammatory regulation, circadian physiology, and broader anabolic signaling interactions involving growth hormone and IGF-1 pathways.
Cortisol coordinates circadian energy availability and immune tone via GR-mediated genomic programs.
