Pituitary Hormones and Their Control by the Hypothalamus Flashcards
Which hormones are released by the posterior pituitary gland?
- ADH
- oxytocin
Which hormone are released by the anterior pituitary gland?
- prolactin
- GH
- TSH
- FSH
- LH
- ACTH
Where are the posterior pituitary hormones synthesized?
In the magnocellular neurons located in the hypothalamus
How are ADH and oxytocin released?
- made in the hypothalamus
- packed in secretory granules with another protein (carrier protein, neurophysin) as preprohormone
- travels down the axon in the pituitary stalk
- stored at nerve terminal at the posterior pituitary
- released into the capillary plexus on the inferior hypophysial artery
What are the 5 cell types that produce hormone of the anterior pituitary?
- Somatotropes –> growth hormone
- Thyrotropes –> thyroid stimulating hormone (thyrotropin)
- Corticotropes –> adrenocortical tropic hormone
- gonadotropes –> follicle stimulating hormone & luteinizing hormone
- Lactotropes –> prolactin
How is the blood supplied to the anterior pituitary?
-blood vessels enter the lowest portion of the hypothalamus @ the median eminence
- goes downward along the pituitary stalk
- then go through the hypothalamic-hypophysial portal vessels
- lastly, it makes it to the anterior pituitary sinuses
How does the hypothalamus control anterior pituitary secretion?
There is releasing/ inhibitory hormones synthesized and secreted by the hypothalamus
- these hormones are released by the nerve fibers to the median eminence & tuber cinereum into tissue fluids
- absorbed by the hypothalamus-hypophysial portal system
- carried directly to the anterior pituitary sinuses
What are the two inhibitory hormones produced by the hypothalamus?
- growth hormone inhibitory hormone (somatostatin)
- prolactin
inhibitory hormone, aka, dopamine
Is hypothalamus the only place to control anterior pituitary hormone release?
No, metabolic substrates in the blood can also exert direct effect on the adenohypophysial cells
What are the 4 physiological functions of growth hormone?
- promotion of linear growth
- promotion of tissue protein deposition
- promotion of fat utilization for energy
- Impairment of carbohydrate utilization for energy
How is growth hormone diabetogenic?
It impairs carbohydrate update by tissues (uses fat as energy) so blood glucose level rises, and insulin secretion increases to compensate for the GH-induced insulin resistance
How doe growth hormone exert anabolic effects?
- uses insulin-like growth factors (somatomedin)
- IGF is secreted by liver and other tissues
- both distant and local effects (paracrine/ autocrine)
How does growth hormone effect carbohydrate utilization?
- decrease glucose uptake by tissues such as the skeletal muscle and fat
- increase production of glucose by liver
- increase insulin secretion
How is the release of growth hormone controlled?
IGF-1 –> acts on the pituitary directly, or through action on hypothalamus (releases somatostatin)
What are some stimuli for growth hormone secretion?
- starvation
- hypoglycemia or low fatty acids in the blood
- exercise
- trauma
- excitement
- Ghrelin
- some amino acids, like arginine
hypoglycemia = potent