Living Control Mechanisms 13.10.22 Flashcards
What is homeostasis?
Maintenance of a constant internal environment so it can function properly in the face of external factors.
What are the steps of homeostasis?
Control centre (detects change), effector, regulated variable, sensor in a loop, all connected
What are some examples of homeostasis?
temperature, potassium, glucose, blood oxygen, hydrogen ion
What is the endocrine communication system?
Hormones to communicate
What is the nervous communication system?
electrical impulses in order to communicated
What is autocrine communication?
Cell is communicating with itself. Cell sends a signal and the signal goes to a receptor, which is on the same cell.
What is the paracrine communication?
Cell sends a signal, diffuses across gap. This is with neighbouring cells that are a short distance away. Inactivated locally, so doesn’t even enter the blood stream.
Give an example of paracrine communication
Interleukins (IL):
- signalling in the immune system
- mainly between white blood cells
Platelet derived growth factor (PDGF):
- released from platelets
- regulates cell growth
What is endocrine system commmunication?
Cells communicating to other cels elsewhere in the body. Signal must travel in the blood stream. Hormones carrying the signal.
Which organs and glands are endocrine?
- hypothalamus (brain)
- pituitary (brain)
- thyroid (neck)
- adrenals (kidneys)
- pancreas (abdomen)
- ovaries
- testes
What is a hormone?
Molecule that acts as a chemical messenger
They are classified according to their structure:
- amino-acid derivatives
- peptide
- steroid
What is an amino-acid hormone?
- simple type of hormone
- synthesised from tyrosine
- E.g. adrenaline
What is a peptide hormone?
- made of amino acids
- vary in size from few amino acids to small proteins
- some have carbohydrates side chains (glycoproteins)
- Hydrophilic (like water)
What do peptide and amino acid hormones do?
Produce a quick reaction in the body
Peptide hormone example of how it is transported
TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone)
- Released from pituitary and stimulates the thyroid gland.
- Hormone pre-made and stored in cell ready to be released when needed.
- Hormone dissolved in blood.
- Receptor on the other cell membrane.
- Chemical reaction produces quick response from cell (signal transduction cascade)