BME | Anatomy - Endocrine System
Endocrine System
Basic Concepts Related to Endocrinology
Endocrine System: Hormones directly enter the extracellular fluid, then diffuse into the bloodstream, acting on respective target cells via specific circulatory pathways.
Endocrine System = Endocrine Glands + Endocrine Cells
Endocrine Cell Group: Cells within certain organs forming glandular tissues with endocrine functions.
Hormones: Highly efficient physiological substances secreted by the endocrine system.
Endocrine System: Cells or glands with endocrine functions secrete highly efficient physiological substances that regulate organ functions through circulation in the bloodstream or fluid diffusion.
Neuroendocrine: The central nervous system contains neurons with endocrine functions that can produce nerve impulses and synthesize and release hormones.
Neurohormones: Hormones produced by neuroendocrine cells.
Source, Types, Mode of Action, Regulation, and Effect of Hormones
Source: Endocrine cells, endocrine glands
Types: Amines, peptides, proteins, lipids
Modes of Transmission: Endocrine, Paracrine, Autocrine, Intracrine
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Endocrine: Act on distant target cells through bloodstream transport (blood transport - long-distance).
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Paracrine: Act on adjacent cells directly through tissue fluid diffusion (fluid diffusion - neighboring).
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Autocrine: Hormones secreted by endocrine cells diffuse locally and act back on those same cells (self - self).
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Intracrine: Hormones produced by endocrine cells that act directly by binding to receptors within the same cell.
Steps of Action: Receptor recognition, signal transduction, cellular response, effect termination
Mechanisms of Action:
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Hormonal action mediated by cell membrane receptors - Second Messenger Theory
Hormone + Receptor → G protein-coupled receptor → Adenylyl cyclase → cAMP (second messenger) → Protein kinase A -
Hormonal action mediated by intracellular receptors - Gene Expression Theory
Hormone + Cytoplasmic receptor → Hormone-receptor complex enters the cell nucleus
Modes of Regulation: Biological rhythmic secretion (biological clock), fluid regulation (direct feedback regulation, axis feedback regulation), neural regulation
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Direct feedback regulation: Effect substance: Blood sugar ↑ → Insulin ↑ → Blood sugar ↓ → Insulin ↓
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Axis feedback regulation: Hypothalamus-pituitary-target gland axis
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Neural regulation: Sympathetic ↑ → Adrenal medulla hormone ↑; Sympathetic ↑ → Adrenal medulla hormone ↑
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The hypothalamus is a crucial pathway linking the nervous and endocrine systems.
Important Endocrine Glands
Important Endocrine Glands: Hypothalamus and Pituitary Gland
Pituitary Gland: Neurohypophysis (does not release hormones but stimulates the hypothalamus to release hormones) + Adenohypophysis
Pituitary Portal System: Vascular network connecting the adenohypophysis and hypothalamus
Neurohypophysis (stores and releases 2 hormones produced by the hypothalamus), Adenohypophysis (produces and releases 7 hormones)
Antidiuretic Hormone: Synthesized and secreted by the hypothalamus, stored and released by the neurohypophysis
Important Endocrine Glands: Adrenal Glands
Important Endocrine Glands: Thyroid (Synthesis and release of thyroid hormones) and Parathyroid Glands
Synthesis of Thyroid Hormones: Thyroid hormones = Triiodothyronine T3 + Thyroxine T4.
Synthesis Steps: Iodination, iodine conversion (requires thyroid peroxidase TPO), coupling
Storage: Exist in extracellular follicular cavities, bind to thyroglobulin TG until secretion
Secretion: Regulated by Thyroid Stimulating Hormone TSH. Pinocytosis → hydrolysis → into blood
Parathyroid Glands secrete Parathyroid Hormone and Calcitonin
Important Endocrine Glands: Various Cells of the Pancreas
Pancreas: Dispersed endocrine cell clusters within the pancreas, divided into 4 types
Alpha cells: Glucagon; Beta cells: Insulin; Delta cells: Somatostatin; PP cells
Insulin
Function: Promotes synthetic metabolism (lowers blood sugar - promotes utilization/glycogen synthesis, lowers fats - promotes storage, raises proteins - promotes synthesis/reduces breakdown)
Regulation: Substrate regulation - blood sugar (↑ blood sugar → insulin secretion; ↓ blood sugar → glucagon secretion), other hormones (gastrointestinal hormones, etc.), neural regulation (sympathetic - inhibits secretion - raises blood sugar, vagus - promotes secretion)
“Most”
Pituitary Gland: The most complex endocrine gland in the body
Key Points
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Understanding the endocrine system
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Endocrine, autocrine, paracrine
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Understanding hormones
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Synthesis and release of thyroid hormones (understand) - what is needed for release - thyroglobulin
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Antidiuretic hormone - urinary system
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Insulin - digestion
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Pituitary gland - regulation of endocrine functions
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