Physiological aspects of the endocrine system Flashcards
What is a hormone?
A chemical signal that enables an event in one part of the
body to have an effect elsewhere in the body.
What produces hormones?
May be produced from specialist organs – endocrine
glands – e.g. thyroid gland
May be produced from cells distributed around the body
– e.g. endothelial cells
How many hormones can an endocrine gland secrete?
Two or more different hormones
E.g. Thyroid Gland
T3 and T4- follicular cells
Calcitonin- parafollicular celks
What types of tissues secrete hormones
Nearly all tissues
Give an example of a hormone that is secreted at multiple sites
Somatostatin
What are the 3 types of chemical signalling?
Autocrine
Paracrine
Endocrine
What does exocrine mean?
Outside the body
What is endocrine signalling?
Within the body, directly into the blood stream, transported to target cells
What is autocrine signalling?
Signalling molecule that actually has an effect on itself
Give an example of autocrine signalling
E.g. T cells, produce growth signals which have effect on themselves
What is paracrine signalling?
Signalling molecules that have an effect on cels around them
Give and example of paracrine signalling
E.g. nerves
Synapses affect other synapses
Some cells can have multiple modes of signalling, give an example of this
Insulin
Has both endocrine and exocrine functions
Beta cells- produce insulin
Endocrine- has effect on multiple cells e.g. adipose, liver and skeletal muscle to enable uptake of glucose
Autocrine- when insulin is released it has some sort of subsequent release from its cells
What are target cells?
A particular hormone usually affects only a limited number of cells, these limited cells are target cells
Why is a cell a target?
Because it has a specific receptor for the hormone
What are the two types of hormone?
Proteins, peptides, amines
Steroids & Thyroid hormones
What is the structure of proteins peptides and amine hormones?
Hydrophilic (can’t cross membrane)
Cell surface receptors, act via second messenger system
Circulate primarily dissolved in plasma
What is the structure of steroids & thyroid hormones
Hydrophobic (Can easily pass across membrane)
Intracellular receptors, promote or suppress gene transcription
Circulate primarily bound to plasma proteins