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10.1-10.2 Hormones and The Endocrine System
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Learning Goals Understand where all hormones are produced and from what body part they come from Understand each hormones effect Understand the endocrine system Textbook pg
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History is Cool 1889 Joseph Von Menring and Oscar Minkowski, France
Removed pancreas in dogs Dogs were fatigued—symptoms of diabetes Ants attracted to dog urine—lots of glucose not being absorbed into dogs Concluded pancreas controls blood sugar somehow
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10.1: Hormones Hormones are chemical regulators that are produced in one part of the body but affect cells in another part of the body, by travelling through the blood Chemicals produced in glands and secreted directly into blood are endocrine hormones Hormones are classified by their activation site Non-Target Hormones (stimulate various parts of the body) Examples: growth hormone, insulin, epinephrine Target Hormones (stimulate specific sites of the body) Examples: parathyroid hormone, gastrin Receptors
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Become active later on Released as prohormones in the inactive form
Ex. Angiotensinogen is released by liver Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) acts upon it Converted to angiotensin Blood pressure rises FYI: medications to suppress ACE prescribed to reduce blood pressure
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Various areas in the body produce hormones to comprise the endocrine system
Hormones can affect cells when they combine with cell receptors Not all cells have the same receptors and some cells have more receptors than others for a specific hormone
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Types of Hormones 1. Protein hormones
Chains of varying lengths of amino acids Water soluble/ hydrophillic Can’t cross phospholipid bilayer Must bind to receptor on the bilayer to effect change
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Ex. Protein hormone glucagon and receptors in liver cells results in phosphorylation reactions causing glygogenglucose Ex. Includes insulin and growth hormone
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Types of Hormones 2. Steroid hormones Are lipids made from cholesterol Water insoluble/ hydrophobic Crosses phospholipid bilayer to effect change within the cell Complex attaches to promoter in DNA Ex. Includes male and female sex hormones and cortisol
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10.2 Endocrine System The endocrine system is a system of glands that are located in various parts of the body They produce hormones that are secreted into the blood which carries them throughout the body
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Hypothalamus Different from other glands since it is in the brain and thus part of the nervous system Neurons inside of it produce a hormone (neurohormone) Sent to pituitary gland to control the production of hormones Uses negative feedback systems to control how the hypothalamus releases hormones
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Pituitary Gland Often called the “master gland” as it controls over the other endocrine glands Connected to hypothalamus Produces and stores hormones Comprised of two lobes: 1. Posterior Lobe Stores and releases Oxytocin, ADH 2. Anterior Lobe Everything else
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Examples of Feedback Loops
In water balance note Review ADH (posterior lobe of pituitary) Review Angiotensin (liver)
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History is Cool Parathyroid glands are found on the thyroid gland
When first attempting to figure out what they thyroid did, it was tricky... When they removed the thyroid in animals to see the effect, they also, inadvertently, removed the parathyroid, too which created confusing results
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Thyroid Gland The thyroid is located is the front of the throat and has a bowtie shape Produces thyroxine (“T4” b/c it has four iodine atoms in it) and triiodothyronine (T3) Regulates metabolism
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Hyperthyroidism Hypothyroidism Overactive
High metabolism = weight loss, increase in body temp, nervousness Hypothyroidism Underactive Low metabolism = fatigued, weight gain, dry skin, edema
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Goiters Iodine needed to produce thyroid hormones
Not enough iodine = not enough thyroxine No thyroxine = more TSH produced Negative feedback loop shuts down thyroid swells b/c overstimulated
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Parathyroid Gland Four glands on anterior side of the thyroid gland
Produces Parathyroid Hormone (PTH) Regulates calcium levels in blood
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Parathyroid Gland
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Adrenal Hormones Adrenal glands on kidney
Adrenal medulla releases ephinephrine and norepinephrine
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Epinephrine/Norepinephrine
signals fight or flight response Increases glycogen conversion to glucose and glucose uptake, heart rate, blood pressure...
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More Adrenal Hormones Adrenal cortex releases aldosterone to increase salt retention in kidneys Aldosterone is a mineralcorticoid Also releases cortisol, a glucocorticoid (promotes breakdown of fats + glycogen glucose in liver!); stress hormone
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Pineal Gland Third eye in reptiles on skull surface
In humans, it is located deep in the brain Melatonin hormone which regulates circadian rhythms in humans
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