BSI 2 Lecture 47: Endocrine 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the major endocrine glands?

A

Hypothalamus, pineal gland, pituitary gland, thyroid, parathyroid, thymus, stomach, pancreas, kidney, adrenal gland, adipose tissue, small intestine, ovaries, and testes

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2
Q

Can hormones be secreted by non-endocrine organs?

A

Yes (Ex. the heart secretes ANP)

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3
Q

What are the three major stimuli for hormone release?

A

Ions or nutrients, neurotransmitters, and hormones

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4
Q

How does the endocrine system control certain body functions?

A

Via blood-borne chemical messengers called hormones

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5
Q

What is the name for specialized neurons that secrete directly into the blood stream rather than across a synapse?

A

Neuroendocrine or neurosecretory cells

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6
Q

Virtually all hormones are either _____ or _____.

A

Peptides or steroids (except for adrenaline and dopamine)

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7
Q

What are the four most important steroid hormones?

A

Estradiol, Testosterone, Cortisol, and Aldosterone

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8
Q

What are the four most important steroid hormones formed from?

A

Cholesterol

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9
Q

Why are steroids produced on demand and secreted directly into the bloodstream?

A

Because they are hydrophobic/lipophilic and can’t be stored in vesicles for calcium-mediated release

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10
Q

Most hormones are found in very _____ concentrations in the blood which means their receptors must be _____ affinity to be activated.

A

Low; high

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11
Q

What is a direct/short feedback loop?

A

When the hormone being released directly effects the gland that is secreting it. Insulin is an example of this.

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12
Q

What is indirect feedback in relation to hormones?

A

It is when the messengers feeding back are not the ones that were originally being secreted.

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13
Q

How are water soluble hormones (peptides and catecholamines) transported?

A

Dissolved in the plasma

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14
Q

How are steroid and thyroid hormones transported?

A

Bound to plasma proteins

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15
Q

There is an equilibrium between _____ and _____ hormone

A

bound; free

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16
Q

Which type of hormone can cross the cell membrane?

A

Free

17
Q

When free hormones cross the cell membrane and bind to an intracellular receptor, what message does this send to the kidneys?

A

It slows/limits clearance of hormones from the plasma by the kidneys

18
Q

What two factors determine the level of hormone in the blood?

A

Rate of secretion vs. rate of removal

19
Q

How are hormones cleared from the body?

A

Metabolism, tissue binding, excretion by the liver via bile, and excretion by kidneys via urine

20
Q

True or false? Most cells are constantly exposed to a “cocktail” of various chemical messengers.

A

True

21
Q

What are the two principle methods for estimating hormone levels?

A

Radioimmunoassay (RIA) and Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)

22
Q

Which test (RIA or ELISA) replaced the other and why?

A

ELISA replaced RIA because there is no radioactivity in the ELISA test