Pituitary Hormone Function (PRL/GH) Flashcards

1
Q

Prolactin

A

its secretion is tonically inhibited by secretion of PIH, or DA, from hypothalamus

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2
Q

what cells secrete PRL

A

lactotrophs, comprise bout 30% of adenohypophysis

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3
Q

Action of PRL

A

targets mammary glands in breast for milk secretion and high levels also inhibit pulsatile secretion of GnRH by hypothalamic neurons

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4
Q

when is prolactin released

A

suckling of the breast in females and in response to stress in males/females

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5
Q

prolactin receptor

A

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
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6
Q

importance of growth hormone

A

fundamental for postnatal growth, stimulates somatic growth and regulates metabolism

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7
Q

what type if hormone is GH

A

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
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8
Q

what hormones influence secretion fo GH

A

GHRH adn somatostatin have opposing actions

  • GHRH stimulation increases cAMP levels while somatostatin decreases cAMP levels
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9
Q

most of GH in blood is in what form

A

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
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10
Q

in what form is prolactin in the blood

A

transported in blood unmodified. Half life of 20-30 min

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11
Q

Direct actions of GH (metabolic effects)

A
  • 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
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12
Q

Generally speaking, what are GH’s effects

A

anti-insulin like, i.e. glucose uptake decreased and plasma glucose levels rise

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13
Q

Indirect actions of GH

A

besides metabolic, these effects are on muscle and skeletal growth mediated by insulin-like growth factor (IGF).

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14
Q

IGF

A
  • 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
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15
Q

IGF receptors

A

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

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16
Q

GH actions mediated by IGF-I

A
  • bone/cartilage: long bone growth promoted by stimulated proliferation of epiphyseal cartilage. After puberty, epiphyses seal and IGF-I no longer has this effect on linear growth
  • Muscle: stimulates proliferation, differentiation and protein synthesis
  • Adipose tissue- stimulates uptake of glucose and inhibits lypolysis. This action is insulin like and antagonizes GH
17
Q

control of GH secretion besides IGF-I

A

other stimuli for GH secretion: hypoglycemia, amino acids (arginine), low FFA levels, alpha adrenergic agonists, beta adrenergic antagonists, estrogens
- opposites inhibit GH secreiton