the endocrine system Flashcards
what is intercellular communication
- direct: via gap junctions or direct linkup of cell surface markers
- indirect: via an assortment of chemical messengers or signal molecules
what is direct communication
gap junctions: link adjacent cells together
- channels: formed by connexon’s that link the cytosol of adjacent cells permitting transfer of ions between the two cells
- example: gap junctions are crucial to survival in the heart
cell surface markers: complementary surface markers = surface receptors
what are indirect chemical messengers / signal molecules
- paracrines, autocrines, cytokines, neurotransmitters and hormones
- process:
1. secretory cell releases chemical messenger into ECF
2. messenger binds to specific receptors on the ‘target’ cell
3. binding of messenger to the receptor triggers a response in the target cell
what are paracrines, autocrines, cytokines and neurotransmitters
- P: local, effect neighbouring cells (histamine, epidermal GF, vascular endothelial GF)
- A: self, secreted by cell and then attach to receptor on that cell (growth factors)
- C: immune cells, target cells / circulate in blood (interleukins, interferons)
- N: neurons, short range, synaptic signalling (ACh, dopamine, serotonin)
what are hormones and neurohormones
- H: long range, endocrine glands, circulate blood, target cell receptors far from gland, low conc., long lasting effect, slow, integrate activity of cells
- NH: neuro-secretory neurons, similar to neurotransmitters, autocrines and paracrines (vasopressin / ADH)
what is the function of the endocrine system
- maintenance of electrolyte, water, nutrient balance of blood (kidney)
- regulation of cellular metabolism and energy balance (insulin) and growth and development (GH)
- mobilisation of body defences (histamine)
- reproduction: secretion of testosterone
what are the types of glands
- exo: produce non-hormonal substances, ducts to carry secretion to membrane surface (sebaceous / salivary glands)
- endo: rich vascular / lymphatic drainage, rapid dispersal of hormones, lack ducts (into blood)
list the endocrine glands and the hormones they secrete
- pituitary gland: FSH, LH, ACTH, TSH, prolactin, GH
- thyroid gland: T3, T4, calcitonin
- parathyroid gland: PTH
- adrenal glands: aldosterone, cortisol, epinephrine, norepinephrine
- thymus: thymosin
- pineal glands: melatonin
- gonads: progesterone, estrogen, testosterone
- hypothalamus: neuroendocrine organ (exo and endo), ADH, oxytocin, releasing / inhibiting factors
describe the mechanisms of hormone action
- must bind to specific receptor
- located in / on cell membrane, in cytosol or in the nucleus
- receptors bind ligands then translate ‘message’ into a cellular response
- involves: activation of transcription factors, increased protein production
- response: activate / deactivate enzymes, induce secretory activity, stimulate mitosis
what are receptors and how do they regulate
- amount of receptors on tissues is not static
- amount of hormones influences number of receptors for that hormone
- up regulation: number of receptors increases on the target cell when hormone levels are low
- down regulation: number of receptors decreases on the target cell when hormone levels are high, desensitises cells to prevent overreaction
what is a negative feedback system
- controls blood levels of hormones
- increased hormone effects on target organs can inhibit further hormone release
- fluctuation of homeostasis within a narrow / desirable range
- stimuli: hormone triggered by endocrine gland stimuli / NS modulation
how is endocrine activity controlled
- rate of production: synthesis / secretion, mediated by +ve and -ve feedback
- rate of delivery: BF to a target organ / cell, high BF delivers more hormone than low BF
- rate of degradation / elimination: characteristic rate of decay (metabolised and excreted differently)
- short half life: stopping secretion = conc. plummets
- long half life: stopping secretion = effects persist for some time
what are hydrophilic vs hydrophobic and lipophilic vs lipophobic hormones
- hydrophilic: dissolve in blood, highly water soluble, low lipid solubility, don’t pass through membrane
- hydrophobic: carrier proteins, high lipid solubility, low water solubility, pass through membrane
- lipophilic: hormones diffuse across cell membrane and bind to cytosolic or nuclear receptors
- lipophobic: hormones bind to receptor, causes response element (HRE) in the nucleus, altering gene expression
what are surface receptors and the three main types
- proteins that are found attached to the cell membrane and bind to external ligand molecules
- ion channel linked: bind a ligand and open / close a channel, activating receptor enzymes / second messenger systems
- G protein linked: bind ligand (odourant molecules, hormones, neurotransmitters) and activate a membrane protein called a G-protein, cause cAMP signalling or PI signalling (epinephrine, ADH)
- enzyme linked: binding of an extracellular ligand (tyrosine kinases, hormones, GF) causes enzymatic activity on the intracellular side
what is cholera
- the downside of g proteins
- transmitted by contaminated water / food
- caused by bacterium Vibrio cholerae, secretion of cholera toxin = choleragen (complex) causes G proteins to stay ‘on’ / activated at all times
- activation ofchloride channel proteins (CFTR), ATP-mediated efflux of chloride ions and leads to secretion of H2O, Na+, K+, and HCO3− into the intestinal lumen
- affects the small intestine and causes violent diarrhoea due to increased water in the gut
how is a signal amplified
- very little messenger necessary to bind target cell and cause large effect
- amplification of the initial signal by a second-messenger pathway
list the three main classes of hormones
- amino acid base (amino acid or protein / peptide)
- steroids
- eicosanoids
what is the pituitary gland
- controls functions of many other endocrine glands
- middle cranial fossa / sphenoid bone
- anterior: larger, glandular tissue, pars tuberalis (sleeve round pituitary stalk), pars distalis (body of gland) and pars intermedia (adjoins posterior lobe), adenohypophysis
- posterior: smaller, neural tissue, infundibulum (connects to hypothalamus) and pars nervosa, neurohypophysis
what is the hypothalamus
- integration centre for many physiological processes
- nervous tissue, specialised neurons
- axons: paraventricular, lateral / medial pre-optic and supraoptic axons terminate in posterior lobe
- AP: no direct neural connection, vascular connection (hypophyseal portal system - HPS), releasing / inhibiting factors to AP
- PP: hormones synthesised / secreted from neurons in hyp. travel from hyp. to PP via axons in infundibulum, stored here (ADH and oxytocin)