Basic principles and concepts Flashcards

1
Q

Define: hormone

A

Chemical substance produced by an endocrine cell in response to a certain stimuli to cause an effect on a target cell which in turn causes a change or adjustment in various organ systems of the body.
; 3 classes- steroids, protein/peptide, amino acid analogues and derivatives

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2
Q

Describe the major chemical classes to which hormones belong, with examples

A

steroid- originate from cholesterol precursor, organs that secrete ex.- ovaries, testis, adrenal cortex, specific hormone ex.- mineralcorticoids, glucocorticois, testosterone and estradiol

protein/peptide- name indicates structure, organs that secrete ex.- pancreas, thyroid, parathyroid, anterior pituitary, specific hormone ex.- insulin, prolactin, parathormone

amino acid analogues/derivatives- name indicates chemical structure, organs that secrete ex.- thyroid, adrenl medulla, specific hormones ex.- thyroxine (T4), epinephrine and norepinephrine (catecholamines)

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3
Q

Describe the 2 major classes of hormone receptors and their functions

A

membrane receptors- used by hormones that cannot diffuse through plasma membrane (amines, peptides, proteins)
does not directly alter gene expression
G proteins in cell membrane are activated
1st messenger is hormone, 2nd messenger may be cAMP, cGMP, Ca++

cytoplasmic/nuclear receptors- characteristic of steroid/thyroid hormones
diffuse through plasma membrane
bind to receptor; receptor-hormone complex binds specific DNA sequences
directly alters gene expression
new mRNA and proteins made, new proteins change cell function

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4
Q

Describe the role of cyclic AMP in mediating actions of some protein hormones

A

cAMP may act as a secondary messenger once G proteins in the cell membrane are activated; hormone binds to a receptor which then leads to activation of G proteins, altering cell function and causing multiple biological effects

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5
Q

Give examples of endocrine “glands” that are part of the nervous system

A

Hypothalamus, pituitary

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6
Q

Describe how steroid hormones act

A

diffues through plasma, act on nuclear receptors, bind to receptor, receptor/hormone complex binds to DNA sequence particularly in the promoter region, directly alters gene expression, leads to new protein and a biological response

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7
Q

Describe negative feedback, and the role of negative feedback systems in the control of endocrine organs

A

increase of concentration in system leads to down-regulation of production of hormone; ex.- T3 and T4 levels will signal increase or decrease of TRH (hypothalamus) or TSH (anterior pituitary/adenohypophysis)

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8
Q

Describe autocrine, paracrine and endocrine

A

autocrine- acts on same cell that produced it
paracrine- acts locally by diffusing from its source to target cells in the neighborhood
endocrine- secreted into blood; binds distant target cells

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9
Q

Define and give examples of diseases that arise from hormone deficiency

A

Deficiency- lack of sufficient hormone production, can be caused by destructive process in the gland or genetic defect in hormone production
Ex.- Hypothyroidism (T4), Dwarfism (GH), Diabetes (Insulin)

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10
Q

Define and give examples of diseases that arise from hormone excess

A

Excess- overproduction of hormone either by the gland itself or tissue not normally active as an endocrine gland (tumor)
Ex.- Cushing’s, Primary hyperthyroidism

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11
Q

List clinical approaches to treating diseases that arise from hormone excesses

A

surgery, irradiation, hormone suppression through medication

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12
Q

List clinical approaches to treating diseases that arise from hormone deficiency

A

supplementation; hormone replacement therapy

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13
Q

Define: receptor

A

specific binding site; can have affinity for one or more type of molecule depending on conformation

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14
Q

Define: second messenger

A

activated by primary messenger; seen in cells that cannot permeate cell membrane, activation of G cells cause initiation of these secondary messengers; use membrane receptors

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15
Q

Define: feedback

A

mechanism of controlling production of a substance, including hormones; ex. - negative feedback loop involving T3/T4 and the hypothalamus and pituitary

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16
Q

Define: gland

A

an organ in an animal’s body that synthesizes a substance such as hormones for release into the bloodstream (endocrine gland) or into cavities inside the body or its outer surface (exocrine gland)

17
Q

Define: target organ

A

targeted by endocrine glands; can be affected by multiple hormone types and have different biological changes accordingly

18
Q

Define: endocrine tumors

A

growth of tissue that either directly secretes excess hormone or mimics hormone production to cause a hormone excess state

19
Q

Define: hormone production

A

produced by specialized tissue cells which then target specific locations/tissues/organs and have a biological impact