Physiology 1 Flashcards

1
Q

what is the endocrine system?

A

A system that controls organ function by secreting hormones from cells, tissues and glands that are carried in the BLOOD to DISTAL organs.

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2
Q

What is a fast hormone-organ response?

A

The secretion of adrenaline by the adrenal glands - heart rate raises quickly.

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3
Q

What is a slow hormone-organ response?

A

Secretion of the human growth hormone increases protein synthesis over days-weeks.

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4
Q

what is a hormone?

A

A chemical secreted by a cell, tissue or gland that travels through the BLOOD and has a DISTAL site of action.

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5
Q

What is the importance of hormone receptors?

A

Only organs with the specific hormone receptor will respond to the hormone in the blood. If they don’t have the correct receptor, they will ignore the hormone.

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6
Q

What is a neurotransmitter?

A

This is a chemical released by a NERVE - it crosses a SYNAPSE (doesn’t travel through the blood). It has a LOCAL site of action.

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7
Q

When do the endocrine and nervous system work together?

A

To provide long-term phenomena - like growth.

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8
Q

What is a neuroendocrine hormone?

A

A chemical released by NERVOUS TISSUE that travels through the BLOOD. It has a distal site of action.

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9
Q

what is an example of a neuroendocrine tissue?

A

The hypothalamus - it is in the brain (nervous tissue) BUT its secretions travel through the BLOOD to a DISTAL site of action.

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10
Q

What effect does insulin have on. skeletal/adipose tissue?

A

It stimulates glucose uptake.

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11
Q

What effect does insulin have on the liver?

A

It stimulates glycogenesis and inhibits gluconeogenesis.

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12
Q

Which glands have purely endocrine function?

A

Thyroid, adrenal, pituitary, hypothalamus.

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13
Q

How do clinicians monitor hormone activity?

A

Over 24 hours - because its released in short bursts.

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14
Q

What concentration of hormones is needed?

A

10^-9 - 10^-12 Molar.

very small

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15
Q

What is the difference between endocrine and exocrine glands?

A

exocrine glands delivery their secretion into the external environment. Endocrine glands release hormones into the blood - they are always ductless.

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16
Q

what is a peptide/protein hormone?

A

composed of amino acid chains. They are stored in vesicles. They are water soluble and non fat - they travel through the cell using GPRC or tyrosine kinase.

17
Q

What do the GPCR protein hormones produce?

A

Fast response.

These influence ion channels on the cell surface.

18
Q

What does tyrosine kinase protein receptor produce?

A

Slower response. Kinase is also an enzyme which phosphorylates proteins - causing a change in cell behaviour.

19
Q

What is C-peptide?

A

It is an inactive fragment of the amino acid. Produced with insulin. It is still released into the blood and can be measured.

20
Q

How and why is C-peptide measured?

A

Its measured in the plasma or urine. - to measure pancreatic function.

It is useful to measure because it shows levels of human produced insulin (which will be the same level as the C-peptide) - because insulin can’t be measured as it is given synthetically to type 1 diabetics. - so measuring its levels are not accurate.

21
Q

How are peptide proteins transported into the cell?

A

They are lipophobic - need to bind to a cell surface receptor. Either G-protein coupled receptor or tyrosine kinase.

22
Q

What are amine hormones?

A

These are derived from the amino acid tyrosine or tryptophan.

23
Q

What is the only amine hormone produced from tryptophan?

A

Melatonin. - it regulates the circadian rhythm.

24
Q

What are the two classes of amine hormones?

A

Catecholamines - similar to peptide hormones (hydrophilic and lipophobic).
Thyroid hormones - similar to steroid hormones - lipophilic and hydrophobic.

25
Q

What is storage like for all amine hormones?

A

All amine hormones are synthesised and stored before use.

26
Q

What are steroid hormones?

A

these are derived from cholesterol. These are NOT produced before use. They are hydrophobic and lipophilic. They are transported through the plasma using carrier proteins.

27
Q

What is the most common carrier protein for steroid hormones?

A

Albumin.

It helps steroids travel through the plasma and it prevents enzyme degradation.

28
Q

What is the half life of steroid hormones?

A

60-90 minutes.

29
Q

What is the half life of amine hormones?

A

2 minutes.

30
Q

Why is the half life of steroid hormones longer?

A

They have a slower onset of action. They are also only synthesised as and when needed. Their half life is protected by carrier proteins.

31
Q

Where are steroid hormones produced?

A

Gonads - sex steroids.
Placenta - hCG, sex steroids.
Kidney - Vitamin D3.
Adrenal cortex - corticosteroids.

32
Q

where are steroid receptors located?

A

They are located INSIDE the cell. Because steroids easily cross the plasma membrane.

33
Q

What happens when steroids receptor are activated?

A

Genomic effect - There is a change in gene expression at the nucleus. This either increases or decreases protein synthesis.

34
Q

How long do steroids take to have an effect?

A

Hours to days.

35
Q

What is the law of mass action?

A

As free (unbound) protein leaves the plasma (taken into the cell), more hormone is released from carriers. - there’s always a reservoir.

36
Q

Bound hormone : Unbound hormone ratio.

A

There is always more hormone bound to carriers than hormones free in the plasma.

37
Q

What is another carrier protein?

A

Albumin or corticosteroid-binding globulin.