wk 6.1 HPA-Axis and Hormone Regulation Flashcards
What is the role of the Endocrine system?
-Control system of the body
-Long term regulation and adjustment ofhomeostatic mechanisms and a variety ofbody functions
What are endocrine functions?
*Pituitary
*Parathyroid
*Thyroid
*Adrenal
What are the main endocrine glands?
- Pineal
*Thymus
*Pancreas
*Testis / Ovaries
What are the endocrine cells?
Kidney
* Heart
* Stomach
* Small intestine
* Liver Hypothalamus
What are hormones?
- Can be released from more than one type of cell
- Can have more than one type of effect
- Can be permissive
- Can be synergistic
- Can be antagonistic
What are target Organs
Can have receptors for more than one hormone
* Different cell types can respond differently to the same hormone
* The endocrine cell can be its own target cell
* The target has a physiological response or releases another hormone in the pathway
What are the diverse structures of Hormones
Amino acid
– peptides
– proteins
– Steroids
What is circulating hormones
Pass from the secretory cells that makes them into interstitial fluid and blood. Act on distant tissues.Linger in blood for minutes tohours. They are inactivated by theliver and excreted by the kidneys
What is local hormones?
Act on targecells close to release sites. Do notfirst enter blood stream e.g.Macula densa. Paracrine(para=beside) act on neighboringcell
1.What are hydrophilic hormones?
2. Give example?
- Non-Steroid hormones / peptide(small proteins)
- Water soluble – can’t cross theplasma membrane
- Circulate in the ‘free’ active form
- Can be stored
- Work quickly - are activated anddeactivated quickly
2.Insulin, Epinephrine,
1.What are hydrophobic hormones?
2. Give example?
- Steroid Hormones / Lipids
- Fat soluble – pass through theplasma membrane
- Circulate in the ‘bound’ inactiveform
- Cannot be stored
- Work slowly - are activated anddeactivated slowly
- Secreted from Adrenal cortex,testes, ovaries and placenta.
2.Testosterone, Estrogens
Why are hormones important?
1.Control the wake-up cycle and the biological rhythms
- Regulate the activity of the reproductive cycle.
- Induce or suppress the cell cycle (mitosis, meiosis apoptosis)
- Regulate metabolism and cell biochemistry.
- Control hunger and thirst
- Responsible for mood swings
- Activate or inhibit the immune system
- Prepare for mating, fleeing, fighting and coping
- Prepares body for e.g. birth, puberty, parenting and menopause.
- Stimulate or inhibit growth
1.What is the role of the Pituitary Gland?
2. Where is it located?
3. How does it increase or decrease?
1.controls the functions of numerous other endocrine glands
2.beneath the Hypothalamus
3.Increases in size during pregnancy and size decreaseswith age
What are the 5 main endocrine cell types of the anterior pituitary gland?
– Gonadotroph
– Lactotroph
– Somatotroph
– Corticotroph
– Thyrotroph
What are the inhibiting hormones?
- Somatostatin (AKA Growth HormoneInhibiting Hormone)
- Prolactin Inhibiting Hormone PIH (Dopamine)