Introduction to the endocrine system Flashcards

1
Q

Define endocrine system

A

A system that controls organ function through the secretion of chemicals from cells, tissues or glands which are then carried in the blood to the target organs where they influence the activity of the organ

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2
Q

How do tissues detect hormones

A

The presence of specific receptors for the hormones on or in the cell

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3
Q

How does neural communication work

A

Neurotransmitters released from presynaptic neurons travel across the synaptic cleft to the postsynaptic cell to influence its activity

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4
Q

How does endocrine communication work

A

Hormones travel in the blood to their target hormones

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5
Q

What is neuroendocrine

A

Endocrine and nervous system combine

Nerves release hormones which enter the blood and travel to target cells e.g hypothalamus and posterior pituitary axis

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6
Q

How can one hormone produce a different effect in different cells

A

Because each cell can have a different receptor for the hormone which leads to a different downstream pathway

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7
Q

How do exocrine glands deliver their secretions

A

Through ducts to the external environment including the GI tract e.g bile and saliva

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8
Q

What are autocrine secretions

A

cells secrete chemicals that bind to receptors on the same cell

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9
Q

What are paracrine secretions

A

Chemicals diffuse in the extracellular fluid to affect neighbouring cells

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10
Q

What are peptide hormone composed of

A

chains of amino acids

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11
Q

What are amino hormones derived from

A

one of two amino acids - tryptophan or tyrosine

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12
Q

What are steroid hormones derived from

A

cholesterol

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13
Q

What is one of the only amine hormones that comes from tryptophan

A

melatonin

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14
Q

Describe the sequence of how peptide hormones get synthesised and then stored and released

A

They are synthesised by ribosomes as preprohormone until they are needed when the preprohormone is cleaved in the endoplasmic reticulum into prohormone and packaged into vesicles by the golgi apparatus with proteolytic enzymes until it is needed

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15
Q

What do the proteolytic enzymes which are packaged with prohormone do

A

Break the prohormone into the active hormone

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16
Q

What is C-peptide and why is it measured instead of insulin directly

A

Inactive fragment cleaved from insulin prohormone - it is measured instead of insulin directly due to insulin b eing metabolised 5x as fast

17
Q

What is the mechanism of action of peptide hormones

A

they are water soluble so dissolve in the plasma and travel easily but cannot cross cell membranes so they have to bind to receptors on the target cell

18
Q

What are the two receptors that peptide hormones usually bind to

A

GPCR
tyrosine kinase linked

19
Q

What is a GPCR

A

G protein coupled receptor
activates 2nd messenger system or ion channels which leads to modification of existing proteins

20
Q

What is the difference between tyrosine kinase linked receptors and G protein coupled receptors

A

GPCR have a rapid response while tyrosine kinase linked receptors are slower and longer lasting which is why they are associated with growth

21
Q

How are steroid hormones different to the other hormones in terms of production and storage

A

They are synthesised directly as needed and not stored like the other hormones

22
Q

Why can steroid hormones not be stored

A

They are highly lipophilic so can therefore not be retained within a lipid membrane

23
Q

How are steroid hormones transported in the blood considering they are poorly water soluble

A

They are transported bound to carrier proteins such as albumin - this protects them from enzymatic degredation

24
Q

Are steroid hormones quick or slow acting

A

Slow onset of action but action persists longer then peptide and amine hormones

25
Q

Where in the body are steroid hormones produced

A

Gonads
Placenta
Kidney
Adrenal cortex

26
Q

What steroid hormones are produced by the gonads

A

Sex steroids e.g testosterone and estrogen

27
Q

What steroid hormones are produced by the placenta

A

hCG, sex steroids

28
Q

What steroid hormones are produced by the kidney

A

Vitamin D3

29
Q

What steroid hormones are produced by the adrenal cortex

A

corticosteroids

30
Q

Why are steroid hormone receptors located within cells

A

Because steroid hormones are very lipophilic so can cross in and out of the cell membrane

31
Q

What is the effect of steroid hormones when they bind to their receptors

A

Their receptors change the gene expression at the nucleus so they either increase or decrease protein synthesis

32
Q

What do steroid hormones have to be to diffuse into target cells

A

unbound to plasma protein carriers

33
Q

What is the free hormone: protein bound hormone ratio in favour of

A

Protein bound is much in favour but free hormone is the physiologically important fraction

34
Q
A