Endocrine control mechanism
From Iusmphysiology
(Difference between revisions)
(Created page with '*started here on 03/01/11 at 11AM. ==Endocrine control mechanisms== ===Endo signaling=== *It is indirect; goes through the blood stream. *Specificity is defined by target cells…') |
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- | *stopped here on 03/01/11 at 12PM | + | *stopped here on 03/01/11 at 12PM. |
+ | *started here on 03/02/11 at 11AM. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | *He skipped some slides on vasopressin and such. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ===Diagnosis of endocrine diseases=== | ||
+ | *Have to look for the signals in the pathway axis. | ||
+ | *Determine what is high or low and what receptors are present or not. | ||
+ | *Look at the results (short stature, etc.) and work through the pathway. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Treatment of endocrine diseases=== | ||
+ | *Ask yourself if the hormone or receptor can be bypassed by intervening downstream. | ||
+ | *If the final receptor is missing then you're in a tough place. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Post-pit associated diseases=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====Diabetes insipidus==== | ||
+ | *This is a disease of lack of action. | ||
+ | *When vasopressin doesn't work at the kidney, you get diabetes insipidus. | ||
+ | *Increased thirst (polydipsia) and urination (polyuria). | ||
+ | *Central DI: mutated gene so hormone isn't made. | ||
+ | **Tx with pills or nasal sprays to replace the AVP. | ||
+ | *Peripheral DI: mutation in receptor or a problem with aquaporin such that kidney doesn't work | ||
+ | **Give drug that increases kidney tubule sensitivity to AVP | ||
+ | **Harder to treat than central DI. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====Syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion (SIADH)==== | ||
+ | *Over secretion of ADH | ||
+ | *Can be caused by anasesthetics, drugs, tumors, smoking. | ||
+ | *Can be mild to severe | ||
+ | **Severe -> coma and death | ||
+ | *Tx: | ||
+ | **Mild: control water intake | ||
+ | **severe: kill some kidney function and thus induce the opposite disease | ||
+ | ***This is a common trend in endocrine disorders: fix one extreme by making the pt in the other extreme (which can be treated) | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | *Moved on to [[Adrenal gland]] on 03/02/11 at 11:11AM. |
Revision as of 16:10, 2 March 2011
- started here on 03/01/11 at 11AM.
Endocrine control mechanisms
Endo signaling
- It is indirect; goes through the blood stream.
- Specificity is defined by target cells having the appropriate receptors.
- There are many feedback mechanisms to maintain homeostasis.
Properties of hormones
- See slide.
Hormones have varied chemical structures
- Can be amines, polypeptides (nasal sprays), proteins (must be injected), thyroid hormones, steroids, arachidonic acid derivatives (e.g. prostaglandins)
- Chemical structure determines deliverability.
Cartoon
- Just shows that endocrine is indirect
Cartoon
- Paracrine, autocrine, endocrine.
- Juxtacrine: membrane proteins of neighbors communicate.
- Brain is a major endocrine gland.
Peptide and protein hormones
- Insulin, growth hormones, glycoproteins
- Presequence is cleaved
- Then prosequence is cleaved
- Then the hormone is generated.
- Think ACTH.
Structure map
- We are not supposed to know all that.
Endocrine glands
- Old view has only 7 but we now know that many tissues secrete many hormones.
- For example, adipose releases laptin and such.
- Also, GI releases hormones ("a gut feeling").
- Glands:
- Ductless
- Secrete hormones
- Well perfused (to receive and respond to signals)
- Respond to regulatory signals
- Have diverse embryological origins
- Used to say: small size but we don't use this any more b/c of gut and adipose, etc.
- This list is true, but there are some organs that are composite so they may have additional features (like the pancreas has ducts b/c it has another fxn).
Endocrine map
- Not tested.
- Many developmental diseases result in loss of endocrine tissue or fxn.
Hormone stimuli and responses
- ?
Hormone transport
- Sometimes carrier protein carry hormones.
- General rule:
- Amines, peptides, and proteins travel free
- Steroids, and thryoid hormones travel bound
- There are exceptions:
- Insulin like growth factors are proteins but have specific binding proteins.
Hormone metabolism, degradation, and excretion
- Carrier proteins can change the 1/2 life.
- MCR is the inverse of the 1/2 life.
Peripheral transformation
- Most of the thyroid production is T4, but the active molecule is T3.
- So one of the iodines must get ripped off to make it active.
- TEstosterone is active
- Can be converted to dihydrotest via 5 alpha reductase that has separate, important roles (DHT).
- DHT associated with Male pattern baldness
- Propecia converts test to dht
- Bad for pregnant women: ambiguous genitalia, and dev issues for male baby
Endocrine diseases
- Causes:
- Lack of hromones (enzyme or gen missing)
- lack of receptor
- Too much hormone
- Lack of control mechanism
- Other hormones having a deleterious effect
Endocrine control systems
- Ant pit -> tsh -> thyroid -> t3, t4 -> repress tsh release at the ant pit.
- Neg feedback
- Suckling at nipple -> neuro signal -> brain -> post pit -> oxytocin -> milk ejecation at breast -> more suckling
- Positive feedback
- Stops when baby stops suckling
- Inhibitory release by brain, like prolactin being under constant repression
- Inhibitory control
- Enzyme action at a certain place converts a hormone to active form
- Metabolic control
- GIP on pancreas
- Feedfoward control
Specificity
- There is very high specificity in hormone receptors.
- Estrogen and testosterone look very similar as do their receptors.
Signaling pathways
- Remember that not all pathways amplify the signal.
Ab-based hormone assays
RIA
- A competition assay:
- Known amount of radioactive hormone
- Unknown amount of unlabeled hormone
- Ab for target hormone you are trying to measure
- The more unlabeled hromone in sample, the more radiation displaced.
- Use a curve to determine concentration.
- Highly specific.
- Does not correlate to biological activity.
- Experiments are calibrated so that important samples land on the steep, straight part of the curve.
- IMprt b/c small changes in sample give big changes in radioactivity.
- Impt b/c ?
Sandwhich assay / immunometric analysis
- Faster and more sensitive than RIA.
- Second ab can bring in radioactivity or color or enzyme
- These diagnostics are highly automated.
Assays in diagnostic medicine - problems
- Assays may not be comparable across locations b/c of different protocols, storage methods, biological variability, temporal differences in hormone production.
- Pharma can change them, too, via contraception, etc.
- Arginin can cause a child to dump the pit's reservoir of growth homrone, but even that response is variable among people.
Pituitary gland
- Controls: growth, metabolism, reproduction, stress response, lactation
- Used to be called the mastergland
- Not really true b/c brain regulates the pit
- But the pit does control many other organs
DEvelopment
- Many pit diseases have their origin in dysfunctional development.
- The pit is a composit gland
- Comes from the developing ventral brain
- Comes from the rahke's pouch in the roof of the developing mouth
- Moves up and becomes associated with base of brain
- Then sphenoid bone grows to separate pouch from mouth.
- Two origins: both ectodermal
- Oral ectoderm
- Generates the adenohypophysis
- Forms two sections:
- pars tuberalis
- pars distalis (anterior lobe) and
- pars intermedia (intermediate lobe)
- Very small in humans
- Neurohypophysis
- Three parts:
- Median eminence
- Infandibular stalk
- Posterior lobe (pars nervosa)
Hypothalamus-Ant Pit axis
- Brain makes hormones, control ant pit via protal vessels
- Ant pit makes it's own hormones and sends them systemically.
Ant pit hormones
- Any cell that makes one of these have names
- GH
- PRL
- ACTH
Get the others
Hypothalamus-Post Pit axis
- Here the brain makes the hormones and delivers them directly
- Cell bodies in the hypothalamus are neruons.
- Nerve endings pass through stalk to the posterior pit
- Makes some hormones
- Post pit is truly an extension of the brain
- Post pit
- Make vasopressin and ADH
Missed some stuff including magnocenter
- stopped here on 03/01/11 at 12PM.
- started here on 03/02/11 at 11AM.
- He skipped some slides on vasopressin and such.
Diagnosis of endocrine diseases
- Have to look for the signals in the pathway axis.
- Determine what is high or low and what receptors are present or not.
- Look at the results (short stature, etc.) and work through the pathway.
Treatment of endocrine diseases
- Ask yourself if the hormone or receptor can be bypassed by intervening downstream.
- If the final receptor is missing then you're in a tough place.
Post-pit associated diseases
Diabetes insipidus
- This is a disease of lack of action.
- When vasopressin doesn't work at the kidney, you get diabetes insipidus.
- Increased thirst (polydipsia) and urination (polyuria).
- Central DI: mutated gene so hormone isn't made.
- Tx with pills or nasal sprays to replace the AVP.
- Peripheral DI: mutation in receptor or a problem with aquaporin such that kidney doesn't work
- Give drug that increases kidney tubule sensitivity to AVP
- Harder to treat than central DI.
Syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion (SIADH)
- Over secretion of ADH
- Can be caused by anasesthetics, drugs, tumors, smoking.
- Can be mild to severe
- Severe -> coma and death
- Tx:
- Mild: control water intake
- severe: kill some kidney function and thus induce the opposite disease
- This is a common trend in endocrine disorders: fix one extreme by making the pt in the other extreme (which can be treated)
- Moved on to Adrenal gland on 03/02/11 at 11:11AM.