Endocrine System Flashcards
Duties of the endocrine system
- Controls and monitors glands and processes in the body by using hormones which collect information and then stimulates organs, glands and tissues to respond.
- Second controlling system of the body
- Uses chemical messengers (hormones) that are released into the blood
o Collect information and stimulate effectors to respond - Secretes hormones which are slow to react but effect is long-lasting
What process do the endocrine hormones control
o Reproduction o Growth and development o Mobilization of body defenses o Maintenance of much of homeostasis o Regulation of carbohydrate, protein and fat metabolism o Water and electrolyte balance o Energy balance o Aid in the bodies response to infection and stress
Classification of hormones
- Amino acid–based, which includes:
Proteins
Peptides
Amines
Excludes those secreted by the adrenal cortex and the reproductive glands - Steroids (lipid hormones) — made from cholesterol
- Prostaglandins—made from highly active lipids that act as local hormones, released from all cell membranes
Duties of hormones
o Change plasma membrane permeability or membrane potential by opening or closing ion channels
o Activate or inactivate enzymes
o Stimulate or inhibit cell division
o Promote or inhibit secretion of a product
o Turn on or turn off transcription of certain genes
Two mechanisms of hormone action
- Direct gene activation
o Used by steroid hormones and thyroid hormone - Second-messenger system
o Used by protein and peptide hormones
o Can influence cell activity by binding to hormone receptors on the target cells
Steps of direct gene activation
- Steroid hormones diffuse through the plasma membrane of target cells
- Once inside the cell, the hormone enters the nucleus
- The hormone binds to a specific protein within the nucleus
- Hormone-receptor complex binds to specific sites on the cell’s DNA
- Certain genes are activated to transcribe messenger RNA
- mRNA is translated in the cytoplasm
- New proteins are synthesized
Steps of Second Messenger System
- Hormone (first messenger) binds to a membrane receptor protein
- Activated receptor sets off a series of reactions that activates an enzyme
- Enzyme catalyzes a reaction that produces a second-messenger molecule (such as cyclic AMP, known as cAMP)
- Oversees additional intracellular changes to promote a specific response in the target cell
Stimuli that activate endocrine glands are
Hormone levels in the blood are maintained mostly by negative feedback
- The stimuli that activate endocrine glands fall into three major categories
o Hormonal
o Humoral
o Neural
Describe hormonal stimuli
- Most common category of stimulus
- Endocrine organs are activated by other hormones from other endocrine organs
- Example:
o Hormones of the hypothalamus stimulate the anterior pituitary to secrete its hormones to influence the thyroid gland, adrenal cortex, gonads, pancreas and adrenal medulla
o After target tissue is stimulated hypothalamus and pituitary receive signals (hormones) that stop the hormones released ending chain of hormonal control
Describe humoral stimuli
- Changing blood levels of certain ions and nutrients stimulate hormone release
o Humoral indicates various body fluids, such as blood and bile - Examples:
o Parathyroid hormone and calcitonin are produced in response to changing levels of blood calcium levels
Blood calcium then rises ending release of parathyroid hormone
o Insulin is produced in response to changing levels of blood glucose levels
Describe Neural Stimuli
- Nerve fibers stimulate hormone release
- Most are under the control of the sympathetic nervous system
- Examples:
o Sympathetic stimulation of the adrenal medulla to release epinephrine and norepinephrine during fight or flight response
Effect
• Increased HR, BP, rate of respiration and blood flow to muscles
• Decreased blood flow to visceral organs and pupils are dilated
Major endocrine organs
- Hypothalamus
- Pituitary gland
- Pineal gland
- Thyroid gland
- Parathyroid glands
- Thymus
- Adrenal glands
- Pancreas
- Gonads (testes and ovaries)
Endocrine glands meaning and examples
internal secretion directly into the blood stream
- Endocrine glands are ductless glands
o Anterior pituitary, thyroid, adrenals, parathyroids, sweat glands, salivary glands, lacrimal glands and pancreas glands
Exocrine glands meaning
external secretion have ducts to carry secretions to body surface or other organs
What are some mixed glands
pancreas, gonads
Duties of the hypothalamus
- Collects information from body systems and integrate responses in systems to maintain homeostatic balance
o Regulates metabolism, heart rate, energy level, thirst, blood composition and pressure, nutrient intake - Hypothalamus produces releasing hormones and inhibiting hormones
o These hormones are released into portal circulation, which connects hypothalamus to anterior pituitary - Hypothalamus also makes two hormones: oxytocin and antidiuretic hormone
o Carried to posterior pituitary via neurosecretory cells for storage
Duties of the pituitary gland
- Pea-sized gland that hangs by a stalk from the hypothalamus in the brain
- Protected by the sella turcica of the sphenoid bone
- Has two functional lobes
o Anterior pituitary—glandular tissue
o Posterior pituitary—nervous tissue - Often called the “master endocrine gland”
Duties of the posterior pituitary gland
- Does not make the hormones it releases not a true endocrine gland
- Stores hormones made by the hypothalamus
o Two Hormones Released
Oxytocin
Antidiuretic hormone (ADH)
What is oxytocin
- Stimulates contractions of the uterus during labor, sexual relations, and breastfeeding
- Causes milk ejection (let-down reflex) in a breastfeeding woman
- Mammary glands to secrete milk from mammary ducts
Antidiuretic Hormone (ADH)
- Inhibits urine production (diuresis) by promoting water reabsorption by the kidneys
- Urine volume decreases, blood pressure increases
- In large amounts, causes constriction of arterioles, leading to increased blood pressure (the reason why ADH is known as vasopressin)
- Increases blood volume because of increased reabsorption of fluid and sodium by the kidney contributing to higher blood pressure
- Alcohol inhibits ADH secretion
o Resulting in increased urination, dehydration and dry mouth the morning after drinking - Subject to humoral control
- Secreted when plasma levels decreases from hydration, profuse sweating during exercise, secreted when solid particles in the blood become more concentrated
What are the 6 pituitary hormones
- Two hormones affect nonendocrine targets
o Growth hormone
o Prolactin - Four are tropic hormones – stimulate target organs (endocrine glands)
o Follicle-stimulating hormone
o Luteinizing hormone
o Thyrotropic hormone
o Adrenocorticotropic hormone - Stores and releases hormones from hypothalamus
Duties of the anterior pituitary hormones
- Are proteins (or peptides)
- Act through second-messenger systems
- Are regulated by hormonal stimuli
- Are regulated mostly by negative feedback