❗Hormones and Receptors Flashcards

1
Q

Once again, somatostatin is released by ____________.

A

the delta cells of the pancreas

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2
Q

What paracrine function does somatostatin have?

A

It inhibits the release of insulin from pancreatic beta cells.

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3
Q

Hormones can be autocrine, paracrine, and/or endocrine. This does not depend on ____________.

A

the chemical

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4
Q

There are four chemical backbones for hormones: __________________.

A
  • Tyrosine: epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine, thyroxine
  • Peptides: hypothalamic (oxytocin, vasopressin, GnRH, TRH)
  • Proteins: insulin, growth hormone, glucagon
  • Steroids: corticosteroids, testosterone, vitamin D
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5
Q

What four functional categories of hormones does Dr. Vijayaraghavan want us to know?

A
  • Water/minerals: ADH, aldosterone
  • Energy: insulin
  • Growth:
  • Reproduction:
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6
Q

Which kind of hormones are contained in and secreted by calcium-dependent exocytosis?

A

Water soluble hormones; this occurs because these hormones are made inside cells but need to pass through the plasma membrane.

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7
Q

______________ hormones are controlled only by transcription factors.

A

Fat soluble hormones (controlled this way because they cannot be stored in vesicles)

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8
Q

It’s the level of the __________ hormone that is regulated.

A

free (i.e., not bound to protein)

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9
Q

Describe the process of bioassay.

A

Bioassays are ways of measuring the effect of the hormone. For example, if you have radiolabeled glucose in a dish of myocytes and you add insulin, then you can determine how much glucose entered cells (by washing off the excess radiolabeled solution).

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10
Q

Which kinds of hormones have receptors?

A

Those that are water-soluble: the tyrosine-derived ones, the proteins, and the peptides

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11
Q

Give the three types of receptors and the kinds of hormones that bind to each.

A
  • GPCR: hypothalamic
  • Cytokine: GH, PRL
  • EGFR: insulin
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12
Q

Trace the signaling pathway that leads to the production of thyroid hormone.

A

Hypothalamus: secretes thyroid-releasing hormone, which acts on the pituitary gland.

Pituitary: secretes thyroid-stimulating hormone, which acts on the thyroid.

Thyroid: secretes thyroid hormone, which (among other things) acts as a negative feedback mechanism on the hypothalamus (to decrease secretion of thyroid-releasing hormone).

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13
Q

Describe the pattern of secretion of GHRH.

A

Minute by minute, GHRH is released in short, pulsatile bursts. Over the whole day, however, it goes through a long sinusoidal fluctuation, with a peak in the night and a trough around noon.

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14
Q

What percent of fat-soluble hormones exist in the free (unbound) state?

A

1%-5%

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15
Q

_____________ inhibit TRH release from the hypothalamus and TSH release from the pituitary.

A

T3 and T4 (released by the thyroid gland)

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