Lecture 6: Stress and Hormones Flashcards
Review of transcription and genetic translation
- In order to synthesize mRNA, the two strands of DNA must be unraveled by enzymes called helicases;
- A gene consists of a unique linear sequence of DNA (there are special marker sequences denoting the start and end points of each gene).
- Promoter or facilitatory region, marks the start of the gene;
- The binding of a transcription factor (can be a hormonal complex) to the promoter allows the enzyme RNA polymerase to attach to the promoter and begin the process of RNA synthesis;
- The sequence of RNA nucleotides, determined by the sequence of nucleotides along the DNA, eventually determines the sequence of amino acids in the protein product of the gene;
- DNA methylation and histone modification are epigenetic processes;
- DNA methylation is a process of long-term gene silencing that involves attaching a methyl group to cytosines in the promoter region of a gene
Transcription - starts the process of reading mRNA, uses transcription factors.
Translation - translate mRNA to protein
- hormones can have transcriptional effect/signalling
- can distinguish categories of hormones that have a transcriptional effect and others that are working in the cytoplasm.
Stress and its consequences
- Stress is hard to define but its consequences are well noted at the individual and at the populational level;
- homeostasis is fundemental in defining whether a situation is stressful or not - something that throws you out of homeostasis can be described as stressful.
- About half (48%) of acute myocardial infarctions (AMIs; heart attacks) can be associated by patients to specific triggers; something that starts the event.
- Wars, natural disasters, and anxiety-provoking events are associated with an increase in heart attack rates.
- after 2 weeks of the superbowl, increase in death by cardiac attack…crazy
Main questions in the behavior endocrinology of stress:
- Why are some groups and individuals affected more severely by a potentially stressful event than others?
- Are there differences among individuals in perception of stressors, perturbations to homeostasis, and physiological, psychological, andbehavioral responses to stressors? Individual differences…have an impact on how stress effects a human.
- Are stress responses always detrimental, or can they be adaptive in some circumstances?
- How can we measure stress?
Stress and Homeostasis
- Homeostasis is the ability to maintain optimal conditions in the body, and hormones are critical to this process. These hormones may be influenced by the stress response.
- It involves the regulation of fluid and sodium balance, as well as energy balance, eating, and body mass and temperature regulation.
- All living organisms currently exist because they have evolved adaptations that allow individuals to cope with energetically demanding conditions
- Stressors typically disrupt homeostasis, which affects brain and behavior, but it is important to note that the brain itself can perceive psychological factors as stressful and evoke a stress response
What are the sources of stressors?
Environmental factors: temperature extremes or noise are often perceived as stressors.
Physiological factors: insufficient food quality or quantity or water deprivation.
Psychosocial factors: maltreatment, social subordination, novel situations, lack of control. All evoke anxiety.
The stress response
The systems involved in the mediation of stressors (e.g., glucocorticoids, sympathetic and parasympathetic transmitters, cytokines, metabolic hormones) operate as a nonlinear, interactive network in which mediators down- and upregulate one another, depending on such factors as concentration, location in the body, and sequential temporal patterning.
Definition of stress
Stress: Any significant disturbance of homeostasis, as by extreme temperatures or psychological factors
Definition of stressor
Stressor: A condition, agent, or other stimulus that causes stress to an organism.
Defenition of stress-response
Stress-response: A suite of physiological and behavioral responses that help to reestablish homeostasis.
The body wants to reestablish homeostasis after a stressful situation.
Defenition of Flight-or-flight response
Fight-or-flight response: The automatic and endocrine responses that prepare an individual to battle or flee from real or perceived attack, harm, or threats to survival.
What are the major components of the stress response?
Two endocrine systems, one primarily involving epinephrine (adrenaline) from the adrenal medulla and the other primarily involving glucocorticoids from the adrenal cortex, constitute the major components of the stress response.
- distinguished as the short term stress response and long term stress response.
- chronic stress (chronically exposed several times to a stressfull response and will have a chronic effect on individual) is NOT the same as long term stress response (mediated by glucocorticoids, observed after the stressful event occurs, helps recover from situation).
What is the “Emergency theory”?
“Emergency Theory”: Within seconds of perceiving a stressor, the sympathetic nervous system begins to secrete norepinephrine, and the adrenal medullae begin to secrete epinephrine. This immediate, nonspecific
component, are involved in physiological changes in cardiovascular tone, respiration rate, and blood flow to the muscles from the trunk that can support the behaviors needed in the Fight-or-flight response.
Examples of hormonal variations in response to stressful or arousing situations
Modern perspectives on stress are less likely to focus on fight or flight than on a psychological feature of stress, namely, the degree of control the stressed individual has over the situation
- During the finals, peak in epinephrine release.
- People that are learning to parachute jump have increase in cortisol
- GH is inhibited with recurring stress
- GH drops in stressful situation and then reestablishes as the individual gets more used to the stress.
Founder of modern stress research
Hans Selye (1930s) is considered the founder of modern stress research. He was the first to observe the epinephrine and glucocorticoids are released in response to virtually any stressor. He was the first to observe that this system is activated for many different forms of stress.
- not the injection of the ovarian hormone was causing this but probably the manipulation of the animals was causing this response. Probably delt with animals in an aggressive way.
Other stressors as diverse as frostbite, exposure to formaldehyde, or hemorrhage could also elicit these symptoms observed by Selye. The common endocrine event underlying these very different stressors was the release of glucocorticoids from the adrenal cortex. Mediated by glucocorticoids
Epinephrine and cortisol are commonly known as the stress hormones, despite the fact that their major endocrine functions involve metabolism and that circadian variation in these hormones occurs even in the absence of exposure to stress.
Prolonged Stress Response
General Adaptation Syndrome: what are the 3 stages of general adaptation syndrome?
The General Adaptation Syndrome consists of three stages:
1. Alarm Reaction Stage: Initial phase of the body’s response to stress. When a stressor is perceived, the body activates its “fight or flight” response, which involves the release of stress hormones such as epinephrine and cortisol. Physiological changes occur rapidly, including increased heart rate, heightened awareness, and mobilization of energy reserves to prepare the body to cope with the stressor.
2. Stage of Resistance: If the stressor persists beyond the initial alarm reaction stage (with prolonged stress), the body enters the stage of resistance. During this phase, the body attempts to adapt to the ongoing stressor by maintaining elevated levels of hormones and physiological responses. The body tries to cope with the stressor and restore homeostasis.
3. Stage of Exhaustion: If the stressor persists for an extended period or if the body’s resources become depleted, the stage of exhaustion occurs. During this phase, the body’s ability to cope with the stressor diminishes, and physiological resources become depleted. Can lead to death.
Finally, what is “Stress”?
- Most definitions employ some of the prevailing homeostatic notions of stress
- “The recognition by the body of a stressor and therefore, the state of threatened homeostasis. This way stressors are threats against homeostasis; and adaptive responses are the body’s attempt to counteract the stressor and reestablish homeostasis” (Chrousos et al., 1998).
- Defined stress as: Anything that throws your body out of homeostatic balance. Considered together, stress is the sum of all nonspecific effects of factors that can act on the body to increase energy consumption above some resting, or basal, level. but there are limitations to this concept…
- In the short term, the stress response is adaptive and helps individuals cope with emergency situations; in the long term, the stress response tends to be maladaptive (Sapolsky, 1992).
What are the limitations of the homeostatic concept of stress?
- It does not address the issue that psychological stressors, can evoke a full physiological stress response; indeed, this psychological stress response actually causes homeostatic imbalance in an individual rather than restores it.
- Does not account for individual variation in the perception of stressors.
- In order for a definition of stress to be useful, it must address how the same stimulus can be stressful to one individual and pleasurable to another. This needs developmental inquiry to figure this out.
What is stress?
Integrate the notion of homeostasis and looking at when responses of stress are no longer adaptive anymore:
(1) Predictive homeostasis is the response range that comprises daily and seasonal variation in a given hormone
(2) Reactive homeostasis is the range of mediator fluctuations necessary to respond to threats.
(3) Homeostatic overload represents values above the reactive homeostasis range.
(4) Homeostatic failure represents mediator values below the predictive homeostasis range. Failure in bringing back the organism to the homeostatic state.
Detrimental effects of stress:
- sick more easily
- change in circadian rhythm
- digestion slows down, parasympathetic system doesnt work very well.
- blood pressure increases
- loss of menstruation - impacts HPG axis
- hair loss - due to GH
Physiological Effects of the Stress Response
Several other hormones, including prolactin, urocortin, glucagon, thyroid hormones, and vasopressin, may also be secreted from various endocrine tissues during a stress response.
1) release of noreponephrine in the CNS. epinephrine has 6x greater effect than norepinephrine but it takes longer to release.
3) related to the more prolonged physiological response.
Steps of acute stress response
1- Need a quick energy supply in order to sustain the sprint back to a safe place.
2 – The immediate release of catecholamines (NE and EP) raises respiration and cardiovascular rates within seconds; its body requires increased energy availability to sustain these high rates. Immediate increase in available levels of glucose and oxygen in the blood. Epinephrine increases the delivery of oxygen to the tissues and raises sympathetic tone.
3 – Glucocorticoids, which are secreted within minutes, though probably not until the zebra is back to a safe situation, act on metabolic pathways to replenish the energy reserves used to escape the predator. Will help cope with metabolic needs and restore the suply of energy.
4 – Rapid effects of glucocorticoids operate via nongenomic pathways to affect behavioral stress responses, although genomic pathways mediate some of the long-term effects of stressors.
5 – Responses to injuries that might curtail movement (e.g., pain, inflammation) are inhibited by the stress-induced release of endorphins and endocannabinoids.
6 – Energetically expensive activities such as growth, reproduction, and some components of immune function are also suppressed until after the emergency has passed.
7 – Other components of immune function, such as trafficking of immune cells to the skin where injuries might occur, are enhanced during stressful events.
After stress response subsides, parasympathetic tone increases, and metabolic rate returns to baseline.