endocrine and nervous Flashcards
endocrine glands x2
• Endocrine glands x2:
- Exocrine gland: secrete into a duct that carries the secretion to the body surface or to one of the body cavities
› E.g. Sweat glands, mucous glands, salivary glands, glands of the alimentary canal
- Endocrine gland: (aka ductless glands) secrete hormones into extracellular fluid that surrounds the cells that make up the gland. Secretions pass to capillaries to be transported via blood.
› Located in highly vascularised areas to ensure quick delivery
pineal gland
• Pineal gland: - Deep inside brain - Size of pea then decreases - Secretes melatonin › regulation of sleep patterns › production of melatonin stimulated by darkness and inhibited by light
thymus gland
• Thymus gland:
- In chest above heart and behind sternum
- Shrinks after puberty
- Secretes thymosins
› Influence maturation of T-lymphocytes (disease fighting cells)
gonads
- Androgens: male sex hormones. Development and maintenance of male sex characteristics. Made in testes, women also have but at much lower levels
› Maintenance of muscle mass and bone density
› Made in testes under control of LH and FSH - Oestrogen and Progesterone: female sex hormones. Development and maintenance of female sex characteristics.
› With gonadotropic hormones of the pituitary gland, regulate menstrual cycle and changes that occur in pregnancy
› Made in ovaries under control of LH and FSH
thyroid gland
• Thyroid gland:
- In neck below larynx, butterfly shape
- Two lobes on either side of trachea
› Joined by narrow piece of tissue across front of trachea (isthmus)
- Follicular cells secrete thyroxine and triiodothyronine in response to thyroid stimulating hormone
- Triiodothyronine: T3, 3 iodine atoms attached
- Thyroxine: (amine hormone) T4, 4 iodine atoms attached, 20%
› much less active bust lasts longer
› controls body metabolism
› regulates reactions in which complex molecules are broken down to release energy, and where complex molecules are made from simple ones
› brings about release of energy and maintains body temperature
- Calcitonin: released by C-cells. Regulate calcium and phosphate in the blood
› When calcium is high in blood, calcitonin reduces reabsorption of calcium by kidneys and reduces breakdown of bone.
› When phosphate in high in blood, calcitonin moves phosphate into bone and reduces reabsorption by kidneys
› Therefore, decrease calcium and phosphate concentration
parathyroid gland
• Parathyroid gland:
- Rear surface of lobes of thyroid gland
- Usually 4, pea sized, embedded in thyroid
- Secretes parathormone which increase calcium in blood and phosphate secretion in urine
› In bones: increased calcium released into blood
› In intestines: increased calcium absorbed from digested food
› In kidneys: increased calcium reabsorbed into blood from urine
- Negative feedback
adrenal gland
• Adrenal glands:
- 2 adrenal glands, sit on top of each kidney
› Adrenal medulla (inner)
› Adrenal cortex (outer)
adrenal medulla
• Adrenal medulla:
- Produces the catecholamine hormones:
› Adrenaline: (epinephrine) prepare body to react to threatening situations (flight/fight response)
› Noradrenaline: (norepinephrine) acts like a neurotransmitter in sympathetic nerves. Similar to adrenaline. Increases rate and force of the heart beat.
adrenal cortex
• Adrenal cortex: more than 20 hormones known as corticosteroids
- Aldosterone: acts on kidney. Reduces amount of sodium, increases amount of potassium in urine. Hoemostasis of sodium and potassium
- Cortisol: promotes normal metabolism, helps body withstand stress and repair damaged tissue. Anti-stress hormone, increase blood pressure and glucose metabolism, inhibits immune response
pancreas
• Pancreas:
- Below stomach, alongside duodenum
- Both exocrine and endocrine
› Exocrine: (99%) secretes digestive enzymes into small intestine using pancreatic duct
› Endocrine: made of clusters of cells called islets of Langerhans (aka pancreatic islets). Secretes insulin and glucagon
- Insulin: made by beta cells
› Decrease amount of glucose in blood by promoting uptake of glucose from the blood by body cells
› In liver: insulin causes glucose -> glycogen and fat
› In skeletal muscles causes glucose -> glycogen
› Fat storage tissue: glucose -> fat
› Controlled by a negative feedback system
- Glucagon: secreted by alpha cells, opposite to insulin
› Increase blood glucose level by promoting breakdown of glycogen -> glucose in the liver
› Also stimulates breakdown of fat in liver and fat storage sites
other endocrine tissues
• Other endocrine tissues:
- Stomach and small intestine secrete hormones that coordinate exocrine glands of digestive system
- Kidneys (erythropoietin) stimulates production of Red blood cells by the bone marrow
- Heart secretes hormone that lowers BP
- Placenta secretes hormones to maintain pregnancy, stimulate foetal development and mammary glands
hypothalamus and pituitary
- Hypothalamus and pituitary gland work together to control the functioning of many other glands
- The secretions of the pituitary gland are controlled by the hypothalamus by either neurosecretory cells or blood transport (via hypophyseal portal veins) of releasing or inhibiting factors
hypothalamus
• Hypothalamus:
- Connection between endocrine and nervous system
- Below thalamus and above pituitary gland
- Hypothalamus stimulates pituitary gland
- Many functions carried out through pituitary gland
- Secretes releasing factors which stimulate the secretion of a hormone, or inhibiting factors which slow down secretion of a hormone
› Factors travel through blood vessels to anterior lobe -> effects secretion of its hormones
› Other hormones produced by hypothalamus pass along nerve fibres to posterior lobe -> then release
pituitary gland
• Pituitary gland: (hypophysis) joined to hypothalamus by a stalk called the infundibulum
anterior lobe
• Anterior lobe: (adenohypophysis)
- No nerves connecting it to the hypothalamus, but connected by a network of blood vessels in the infundibulum (capillary network) (hypophyseal portal system)
- Secretions controlled by releasing and inhibiting factors released by hypothalamus
- Gonadotropins: affects gonads, FSH and LH
- Growth hormone: stimulates body growth, especially skeletal
- Thyroid stimulating hormone: stimulate production and release of hormones from the thyroid gland
- Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH): control production and release of some hormones from adrenal cortex
- Prolactin: initiate and maintain milk production
posterior lobe
• Posterior lobe: (neurohypophysis)
- Joined to hypothalamus by nerve fibres that come from nerve cell bodies in the hypothalamus and pass through infundibulum.
- Not a true endocrine gland as it doesn’t secrete substances, it stores and releases them
- Hormones are made in the hypothalamus by nerve cells. (in axon terminals)
› Nerve cells have long extensions that pass through the infundibulum to the posterior lobe
- Hormones stored here for release
› Triggered by nerve impulses initiated in the hypothalamus conducted along cell extensions
- Oxytocin: contraction of uterine muscles and milk letdown reflex
- ADH (vasopressin): kidneys, to remove water from urine, retain fluid. Increasing the permeability of the walls, allowing water to re-enter the blood capillaries.
› In high concentrations, ADH can cause constriction of small arteries (arterioles)
hormones
• Hormones:
- Chemicals secreted by endocrine glands, transported via blood
- Can change cell’s functioning by changing cell type, activities or quantities of proteins produced
- They can:
› Activate genes to produce certain enzymes
› Change shape or structure of enzyme
› Change rate of enzyme production by changing rate of transcription/ translation
- May effect:
› All body cells
› Target cells
› Target organs
steroid hormones
• Steroid Hormones:
- Lipid soluble, can’t dissolve in water
- Once released in the blood, bind to transport proteins to travel in bloodstream
- Once reaching target cells, they separate from the transport protein and diffuse across the cell membrane
- Inside cell: combine with receptor protein in cytoplasm/nucleus
› Hormone-receptor complex activates genes controlling formation of certain proteins
› Bind to promoter section of a gene and stimulate/inhibit protein synthesis
- Slow to have an effect but long lasting
- Secreted by adrenal cortex and gonads
protein and amine hormones
• Protein and Amine Hormones:
- Water soluble, can’t diffuse across -> attaches to receptor protein in membrane
- Combination of hormone and receptor causes a secondary messenger substance to diffuse through the cell to activate certain enzymes/ alter cell activities
› Increase/decrease rate of reactions
- Quick but short living
- Protein: secreted by pancreas and pituitary gland
- Amine: adrenaline and thyroxine
hormone receptors
• Hormone receptors: - On surface of the target cell - Specific › Each type only bonds with one specific molecule › Limited number › “lock and key” analogy - Saturated: › Once all receptor molecules are occupied by hormone molecules, the addition of more hormones doesn’t increase the rate of the cell’s activity
enzyme amplification
• Enzyme Amplification:
- Hormone triggers a cascading effect
› Number of reacting molecules involved is increased x100 or x1000 for each step along metabolic pathway
- Series of chemical reactions, where product of one step is an enzyme that produces a greater number of products in the next step
hormone clearance
• Hormone clearance:
- Once hormone has produced required effect, it must be turned off -> by breaking down in target cells, most in liver/kidney
› Excreted in bile/urine
control of hormone secretions
• Control of hormone secretions:
- Over/under secretion cause abnormal body functions
- Regulated by negative feedback systems: response produced by secretion of hormone is the opposite of the stimulus that caused the secretion
nerve cells
- Nervous system receives and processes information from sense organs and brings about responses to the information received
- Nerve cells (neurons): basic structural and functional unit of the nervous system
› Rapid communication
neuron structure
- Neuron structure:
› Cell body: contains nucleus, controls cell’s functioning, directs metabolism, no role in neural signalling. Holds the organelles (mitochondria, Golgi body, etc)
› Dendrites: short extensions of the cytoplasm of the cell body. Increase surface area. Receive nerve messages. High branched and carry messages/nerve impulses into the cell body
› Axon: single long extensions of cytoplasm. Carries nerve impulses away from the body of the cell to other cells. Length varies. At its end, axon divides into many small branches which terminates at the axon terminal
› Myelin sheath: layer of white fatty material that covers axons. - Nerve fibres with myelin: myelinated fibres
- Nerve fibres without myelin: unmyelinated fibres
- Outside brain and spinal cord it is formed by Schwann cells (wrap around the axon)
- Gaps in myelin sheath called nodes of Ranvier
- In brain/spinal cord: made by oligodendrocytes
› White matter: myelinated fibre appears white
› Grey matter: areas made of cell bodies and unmyelinated fibres
functions of myelin sheath
- Function of myelin sheath:
1. Acts as an electrical insulator (stops nerve signal leakage)
2. Protects axon from damage
3. Speeds up movement of nerve impulses along axon