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Principles of Endocrine Regulation

Principles of Endocrine Regulation

Principles of Endocrine Regulation

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Intro & Components - Gland Central

  • Endocrine system: Ductless glands secreting hormones into bloodstream; act on distant target cells with specific receptors.
  • Core Components:
    • Glands (e.g., pituitary, thyroid)
    • Hormones (e.g., insulin, GH)
    • Target tissues (receptor-specific)
  • Central Regulatory Axis ("Gland Central"):
    • Hypothalamus: Brain's control; produces releasing/inhibiting hormones (e.g., GnRH, TRH).
    • Pituitary Gland (Hypophysis): "Master gland."
      • Anterior (Adenohypophysis): Tropic hormones (e.g., TSH, ACTH, FSH, LH).
      • Posterior (Neurohypophysis): Stores & releases hypothalamic hormones (ADH, Oxytocin).
    • Pineal Gland: Melatonin secretion (circadian rhythm). Sagittal view of human brain with endocrine glands

⭐ The hypothalamo-hypophyseal portal system is a specialized capillary network that directly transports hypothalamic releasing and inhibiting hormones to the anterior pituitary, ensuring rapid and concentrated action before systemic dilution. This is a frequent exam topic regarding pituitary regulation!

Hormone Types - Chemical Cast

Hormone types: synthesis, storage, solubility, receptors

  • 1. Peptide/Protein Hormones:

    • E.g., Insulin, Glucagon, GH, ACTH, PTH.
    • Structure: Amino acid chains.
    • Synth: Ribosomal (prepro→pro); vesicle storage.
    • Solubility: Water-soluble.
    • Transport: Free (plasma).
    • Receptors: Cell surface.
    • Action: Rapid, short. 📌 Peptide: Packed, Plasma membrane.
  • 2. Steroid Hormones:

    • E.g., Cortisol, Aldosterone, Estrogen, Testosterone, Vit D.
    • Structure: From cholesterol.
    • Synth: Adrenals/gonads; on demand (no storage).
    • Solubility: Lipid-soluble.
    • Transport: Carrier proteins (plasma).
    • Receptors: Intracellular (gene expression).
    • Action: Slow, long.
  • 3. Amine Hormones (Amino Acid Derivatives):

    • Source: Derived from tyrosine or tryptophan.
    • Tyrosine Derivatives:
      • Catecholamines (Epi, NE, DA): Water-soluble, surface receptors, free plasma (peptide-like).
      • Thyroid (T3, T4): Lipid-soluble, intracellular receptors, carrier-bound (TBG) (steroid-like).
    • Tryptophan Derivatives:
      • Melatonin, Serotonin.

⭐ Thyroid hormones (T3/T4): unique amines, act like steroids (intracellular receptors), need iodine for synthesis.

Hormone Action - Receptor Rendezvous

  • Hormones bind specific receptors (cell surface/intracellular) on target cells. Binding shows specificity, high affinity, saturability.
  • Cell Surface Receptors (Water-soluble: Peptides, Catecholamines):
    • Mechanism: Bind receptor → G-protein/enzyme-linked activation → second messengers (cAMP, IP3/DAG, Ca²⁺, Tyrosine Kinase).
    • Effect: Rapid (sec-min), transient; alters existing protein activity.
  • Intracellular Receptors (Lipid-soluble: Steroids, Thyroid Hormones):
    • Location: Cytoplasm or nucleus.
    • Mechanism: Hormone-receptor complex binds DNA (Hormone Response Elements - HREs) → alters gene transcription.
    • Effect: Slow (hrs-days), sustained; new protein synthesis.

Hormone Action: Extracellular vs. Intracellular Receptors

  • Receptor Regulation:
    • Downregulation: ↓ Receptors/affinity with ↑ hormone.
    • Upregulation: ↑ Receptors/affinity with ↓ hormone.

⭐ G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are major targets for peptide hormones, often modulating cAMP or IP3/DAG pathways.

Regulation - Feedback Fiesta

Endocrine homeostasis is primarily maintained by feedback loops.

  • Negative Feedback: Most common. The final hormone inhibits earlier steps in its pathway, preventing overproduction.

    • Example: Cortisol from adrenal cortex inhibits CRH (hypothalamus) & ACTH (pituitary).
  • Positive Feedback: Less common. The final hormone stimulates its own production or an earlier step, amplifying the response.

    • Example: Oxytocin during childbirth (uterine contractions stimulate more oxytocin release).
  • Other Influences:

    • Neural control (e.g., adrenal medulla).
    • Chronotropic control (e.g., circadian rhythm of cortisol).

⭐ > Most endocrine disorders stem from dysregulation of negative feedback, leading to hormone excess or deficiency.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Peptide hormones: Water-soluble, act via cell surface receptors (GPCRs, Tyrosine Kinase) & second messengers (cAMP, IP3).
  • Steroid & Thyroid hormones: Lipid-soluble, bind intracellular receptors, alter gene expression.
  • Negative feedback is dominant, crucial for homeostasis (e.g., HPA axis).
  • Positive feedback is rare: LH surge, oxytocin during labor.
  • Hormone transport: Peptides circulate unbound; Steroids/Thyroid need carrier proteins.
  • Pulsatile release (e.g., GnRH) prevents receptor downregulation and maintains sensitivity.
  • Metabolic clearance (liver/kidney) dictates hormone half-life; peptides clear faster.

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