Pituitary Hormone Function (PRL/GH) Flashcards
Prolactin
its secretion is tonically inhibited by secretion of PIH, or DA, from hypothalamus
what cells secrete PRL
lactotrophs, comprise bout 30% of adenohypophysis
Action of PRL
targets mammary glands in breast for milk secretion and high levels also inhibit pulsatile secretion of GnRH by hypothalamic neurons
when is prolactin released
suckling of the breast in females and in response to stress in males/females
prolactin receptor
members of growth hormone/cytokine receptor families
- upon ligand binding, receptors dimerize to activate JAK/STAT pathway
- human PRL receptors similar to GH receptors and are well stimulated by GH
importance of growth hormone
fundamental for postnatal growth, stimulates somatic growth and regulates metabolism
what type if hormone is GH
peptide hormone and secretory protein
- can generate alternative forms via splicing
- synthesized as part of a prohormone. Once signal peptide cleaved, it is stored in secretory granules of somatotrophs of adenohypophysis
what hormones influence secretion fo GH
GHRH adn somatostatin have opposing actions
- GHRH stimulation increases cAMP levels while somatostatin decreases cAMP levels
most of GH in blood is in what form
unbound; half life of 20-45 min
- some evidence a portion of plasma GH bound specific binding proteins (GHBP), which are cleaved N-terminal peptides of its receptor
in what form is prolactin in the blood
transported in blood unmodified. Half life of 20-30 min
Direct actions of GH (metabolic effects)
- Adipose: increase lipolysis and mobilization of lipid to increase plasma free fatty acids; antagonizes action of insulin due to eventual loss of subcutaenous fat
- Muscle- strong anabolic action; increased amino acid transport and protein synthesis
- Liver- increased RNA, protein, and glucose synthesis. IGF-I will be secreted to mediate indirect effects. Increased glucose mainly from increased gluconeogenesis not glycogenolysis
Generally speaking, what are GH’s effects
anti-insulin like, i.e. glucose uptake decreased and plasma glucose levels rise
Indirect actions of GH
besides metabolic, these effects are on muscle and skeletal growth mediated by insulin-like growth factor (IGF).
IGF
- powerful mitogen/growth-promoting agent structurally related to proinsulin and has many insulin-like actions
- levels increase slowly from birth to puberty when much more pronounced elevation
- 2 forms (IGF-I and IGF-II), where IGF-I predominant form in postnatal tissues
- production of IGF in a number of tissues requires GH and insulin
IGF receptors
belong to EGF/Insulin receptor family and contain inherent tyrosine kinase activity and upon ligand binding can readily phosphorylate themselves and other proteins of signal transduction pathway
- major path activated by IGF receptors is initiated by binding of insulin receptor associated proteins 1 and 2 (IRS I and II). IRS can bind to other molecules to activate either MAP kinase pathway or transduction mediated PI-3 kinase