Hypothalamus Flashcards

three points of this lecture: - neuroanatomy (structure/function) - hypothalamic-Pituitary regulation (key hypothalamic structures, key functions of hypothalamic regions, diff between control of anterior and posterior pituitary secretion) - sex and sexual dimorphism

1
Q

functions of hypothalamus?

A
  1. internal homeostasis
  2. endocrine control through pituitary
  3. autonomic nervous system control
  4. regulation of food and water intake
  5. emotion and behavior
  6. circadian rhythms
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2
Q

function of nucleus: PVN, AH, medial preoptic, SON, SCN, VMH and mammillary body

A

paraventricular nucleus: water balance; stress; social bonding; secretes ADH (AVP) + oxytocin

medial preoptic: blood pressure; male sex; maternal care

anterior hypothalamic area (AH): body temperature; aggression

supra-optic nucleus: water balance; secretes oxytocin + ADH

suprechiasmatic: biological clock

ventromedial nucleus: satiety; female sex

mammillary body: feeding

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3
Q

functional zones of hypothalamus

A
  1. Periventricular-Borders the third ventricle. Important for regulation of anterior pituitary function
  2. Middle Zone
    produces oxytocin and vasopressin.
    Regulates release of peptides from posterior pituitary
    Modulate autonomic nervous system.
  3. Lateral Zone
    Integrates information from other limbic structures. Involved in regulation emotion and behavior.
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4
Q

functional anatomy of medial preoptic area

A

Medial preoptic area- lateral zone
Regulates Reproductive Endocrinology;
Regulates Sexual and Maternal Behaviors;
Sexually Dimorphic Areas;

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5
Q

functional anatomy of paraventricular nucleus (PVN)

A
  1. Parvocellular neurons project to the capillaries of the median eminence (external zone) where they release vasopressin and CRF into the portal vein.
  2. Autonomic division projects to the brain stem and spinal cord via the medial forebrain bundle to regulate preganglionic autonomic neurons.
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6
Q

functional anatomy of SCN, VMN, and Arcuate

A
1. Suprachiasmatic nucleus- 
Circadian Rhythms.
2. Ventromedial nucleus (VMN or VMH)-
Feeding
Sexual Behavior.
3. Arcuate nucleus (periventricular)
neurosecretory cells regulating anterior pituitary hormone secretion;
Project to median eminence and terminate on portal capillary bed.
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7
Q

the study shows that SCN regulates circadian period

A

Hamster Experiment
Even without light, normal hamster maintains 24 hour cycle while Tau mutant 20 hours cycle

mutation of Tau: 20 hours cycle instead of 24;
lesion of SCN makes running cycle random;
brain transplant of Tau into WT makes it run after 20 hours cycle, while transplant of WT into Tau makes it run 24 hours cycle

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8
Q

anterior and posterior pituitary

A
Anterior=adenohypophysis
- Non-neuronal ectoderm
- Epithelial Cells (no neurons)
- Derived from Rathke’s Pouch (back part of mouth)/ closed system
Posterior=neurohypophysis
- Neuronal ectoderm
- neurons
- open system
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9
Q

function of posterior pituitary and function of oxytocin/vasopression

A

neurons from PVN and SON project directly to the posterior pituitary and secrete oxytocin and vasopressin into the blood stream

Note: oxytocin regulates uterine contraction and milk ejection;
vasopression regulates vascular tone and water re-absorption in the kidney

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10
Q

regulation of oxytocin secretion during birth

A

positive feedback: uterine contraction/cervical stimulation etc > NTS > oxytocin neurons > induce contraction

  1. hypothalamus bursts
  2. oxytocin released to bloodstream
  3. oxytocin causes uterine contraction
  4. uterine contraction causes the release of more oxytocin
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11
Q

regulation of vasopressin secretion

A
  1. baroreceptors: sensing blood pressure > send signal to pituitary through nucleus of the solitary tract
  2. osmolarity
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12
Q

functional anatomy of paraventricular and supraoptic nuclei

A
  1. Magnocellular (middle zone) neurons project directly to posterior pituitary and regulate oxytocin and vasopressin release.
  2. Parvocellular
  3. Autonomic division
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13
Q

AVP regulates water reabsorption in the kidney

A

NaCl increases AVP while alcohol decreases it

AVP opens aquaporins

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14
Q

anterior pituitary (periventricular zone)

A

neurosecretory cells (most in hypothalamus) release hormones in portal vein and secondary plexus and diffuse to endocrine cells (parvocellular (small))

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15
Q

describe the short and long feedback loop in hypothalamus that modulate endocrine function

A

long loop: testes and testosterone
short loop: GnRH, LH, FSH
LH and FSH stimulates the secretion of testes

short loop

  1. hypothalamus release of releasing factors (GnRH) to anterior pituitary
  2. anterior pituitary releases tropic hormone (LH, FSH)
  3. tropic hormones act in the testes
  4. tropic hormones feed back to hypothalamus to inhibit GnRH production

long loop
1 ~ 3 are the same
4. testes release hormone (testosterone) which inhibits GnRH production in hypothalamus

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16
Q

pulsatile pattern

A

pulsatile pattern: receptor (saturated and) internalized, so no need to be constant high level

17
Q

thyroid disorder

A

Hypothyroidism

  • Depression
  • Fatigue
  • Weigh gain
Hyperthyroidism
- Nervousness
- Heart palpitations
- Weight loss
- Most common cause: Grave’s Disease
(antibodies against TSH Receptors)
18
Q

what happens to LH/FSH levels when someone is taking anabolic steroids?

A
  1. drop in LH/FSH

2. less sperm produced

19
Q

what happens to LH/FSH when a man is castrated?

A
  1. no testes
  2. low testosterone count
  3. not a lot of long feedback
  4. hypothalamus overactive
  5. high LH/FSH levels
20
Q

describe female reproduction cycle

A
  1. estrogen primes the brain to respond to progesterone

2. estrogen receptor in VMH is necessary for female sexual behavior

21
Q

evolution of prolactin function

A

Prolactin help milk secretion in mammals;
in birds, but hep milk secretion and brain to give the milk;
concept: hormone both engage in both pituitary gland and brain

22
Q

steroid receptor distribution in the rat brain

A

the MPOA and VMH (lateral zone) integrate endocrine and sensory information to modulate reproductive behavior (synchronized behavior with fertility)

23
Q

sexually dimorphic nucleus of the pre optic area

A

gonadectomize at different stages (P0 and P90);

organization vs activation