ANP 1105A - Anatomy & Physiology I • Basic Cellular Physiology & the Anatomy and Physiology of the Cardiovascular, Lymphatic & Respiratory Systems Lecture 10 - Introduction to the Endocrine System Presented by: Dr. Stephen Gee Faculté de médecine | Faculty of Medicine uOttawa.ca Marieb and Hoehn 11th Ed. – Chapter 16 (pp. 601-611) 16.1 The endocrine system is one of the body’s two major control systems 16.2 The chemical structure of a hormone determines how it acts 16.3 Hormones act through second messengers or by activating specific genes 16.4 Three types of stimuli cause hormone release 16.5 Cells respond to a hormone if they have a receptor for that hormone 16.6 The hypothalamus controls release of hormones from the pituitary gland in two different ways ** Includes Focus Figure 16.1 Lecture Outline The Endocrine System - Overview • Acts with NS to coordinate, integrate activity of virtually all cells • Hormones blood • Responses slower, longer lasting • Controls and integrates – Reproduction, growth, development – Blood electrolyte, water, nutrient balance – Regulation of cellular metabolism, energy balance • Mobilizes body defenses • Endocrinology: study of hormones, endocrine organs Endocrine Glands • Pituitary, thyroid, parathyroid, adrenal, and pineal glands • Hypothalamus: neuroendocrine • Exocrine + endocrine: Pancreas, gonads, placenta • Others: adipose cells, thymus, cells in walls of small intestine, stomach, kidneys, heart Ducts Hormones • Long-distance chemical signals • Travel in blood or lymph Hormones – Two Main Classes • Amino acid derivatives, peptides, and proteins • Steroids - Synthesized from cholesterol TH DBH Tyr L-Dopa NE Hormone Targets Only target cell activity is affected. • Alter plasma membrane permeability and/or membrane potential • Stimulate gene transcription and/or protein translation • Activate or deactivate enzymes (via phosphorylation) • Induce secretory activity • Stimulate mitosis (cell division) Hormone Signal Transduction Water-soluble: (aa–based except thyroid hormone) • Cannot enter cell • Act on PM receptors 2nd messengers • e.g. cAMP; PIP(4,5)2- Ca2+; cGMP; etc. Lipid-soluble: (steroid and thyroid hormones) • Can enter cell • Act on intracellular receptors directly activate genes Mechanism of Hormone Action: cAMP Cyclic AMP • Cyclic AMP (cAMP) is produced from ATP through the action of Adenylate Cyclase enzyme (ON) • cAMP is rapidly degraded by the enzyme phosphodiesterase (OFF) Cyclic AMP Signaling Mechanism • Enzyme cascades amplify signals Cyclic AMP Activation of Transcription • Stimulates gene transcription via the cAMP response element binding protein (CREB) Cytoplasm P Nucleus PKC Activation by DAG and Ca2+ PI(4,5)P2 DAG DAG P P C1A C1B C2 PLC-b PKCa Cytoplasm P IP3 P P PKC activation P P P IP3R Endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release Ca2+ Ca2+ Mechanism of Lipid-soluble Hormones 1.Steroid hormone diffuses through PM, binds intracellular receptor 2.Receptor-hormone complex enters nucleus. 1 3.Receptor-hormone complex binds specific DNA region. 2 3 4.Binding initiates transcription to mRNA. 4 5.mRNA directs protein synthesis (translation) – Proteins have various functions (e.g. metabolic, structural, or secreted) 5 Endocrine Gland Stimuli and Regulation Three types: NS can modify stimulation or inhibition of endocrine glands to override normal endocrine controls • e.g. under severe stress, hypothalamus and SNS override insulin to allow blood glucose levels to increase (-) • Insulin • Aldosterone Blood hormone levels controlled by negative feedback systems • Hormone effects on target organs can inhibit further release • Levels vary within narrow, desirable range Target Cell Specificity • Target cells must have specific receptors for hormone – e.g. ACTH receptors found only on certain cells of adrenal cortex, thyroxin receptors found on nearly all cells • Activation depends on 3 factors: 1. Blood hormone levels 2. Relative number of receptors on/in target cell 3. Affinity (strength) of receptor for hormone • Hormone levels influence receptor number on target cells – Up-regulation: more receptors in response to low levels – Down-regulation: less receptors; desensitizes target cells to prevent overreacting to persistently high levels Half-Life, Onset, Duration of Activity • Hormones circulate in blood free or bound – Steroids and thyroid hormone attached to plasma proteins – All others circulate without carriers • Concentration of circulating hormone reflects: 1. Rate of release 2. Speed at which it is inactivated and removed from body • Removed from blood by degrading enzymes, kidneys or liver – Half-life: time required for level of hormone in blood level to decrease by half (< 1 min to a week) • Response Time: Immediate or hours to days (steroids) – Some inactive until they enter target cells • Response Duration: secs to hrs – Effects may disappear rapidly as blood levels drop, but some may persist for hours at low blood levels – Half-life, onset, and duration of hormone activity - dependent on water or lipid soluble Lipid- versus Water-Soluble Hormones Hypothalamus – Pituitary Gland Neuro-secretory organ connected to pituitary gland (hypophysis) via infundibulum • Secretes 8 hormones, has 2 lobes: Posterior pituitary: neural tissue derived from down-growth of brain - secretes neurohormones • Posterior lobe + infundibulum = neurohypophysis Anterior pituitary (adenohypophysis): glandular tissue derived from oral mucosa Infundibulum Anterior Pituitary (adenohypophysis) • True hormone-producing gland made of glandular epithelium 1. Parvocellular neurosecretory cells: small neurons within PVN - axons project to median eminence, terminals secrete releasing or inhibiting hormones into primary capillary plexus. 2. Hypophyseal portal veins lead to anterior pituitary PVN 1 2 3 3. Secondary capillary plexus empties into general circulation Median Eminence The Hypophyseal Portal System Hypothalamic neurons synthesize releasing and inhibiting hormones 1 • • • • • • Growth hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) Somatostatin (SS)(GHIH) Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) Prolactin-inhibiting hormone (PIH) (dopamine) • Hypothalamic hormones released into special blood vessels control release of anterior pituitary hormones 2 • Blood vessels carry peptide hormones to anterior pituitary – regulate hormone secretion into systemic circulation 3 Anterior Pituitary Hormones 3 cAMP Secretes 6 different peptide hormones o Growth hormone (GH) o Prolactin (PRL) o Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) o Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) o Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) o Luteinizing hormone (LH) Tropins (tropic hormones) regulate secretion of other hormones Hypothalamic – Pituitary - Target Organ System Posterior Pituitary • Axon terminals of hypothalamic neurons and associated blood vessels (neurohypophysis) 1. PVN neurons synthesize oxytocin; SON neurons synthesize antidiuretic hormone (ADH) 1 2. Transported down axons of hypothalamic-hypophyseal tract to posterior pituitary 3. Stored in axons terminals 4. Arriving APs cause release into blood 2 Neurohypophysis 3 4 Summary of Homeostatic Mechanisms Two key homeostatic regulatory systems: Autonomic nervous system • sympathetic versus parasympathetic • (sensory and) motor neural pathways • fast response Endocrine system • hormones released into extracellular fluid and often travel to target organs via bloodstream • slower response time but response can be long-lived • different chemical classes of hormones with associated mechanisms of action