CHPT 17 Functional Organization of the Endocrine System

Functional Organization of the Endocrine System

Overview of the Endocrine System

  • Definition: Composed of ductless glands (endocrine) that secrete hormones directly into the bloodstream.
  • Functions:
    • Regulates metabolism (e.g., glucose homeostasis, blood pressure).
    • Manages electrolyte balance and water regulation (blood pH, Na+, K+, Ca2+).
    • Stimulates growth and development (bone growth, muscle enlargement).
    • Controls reproduction through hormone regulation in both sexes.

Comparison of Nervous and Endocrine Systems

  • Nervous System:

    • Communicates via electrical impulses and neurotransmitters.
    • Fast response (1-10 msec) at specific target cells.
    • Effect stops quickly after stimulus cessation.
  • Endocrine System:

    • Communicates through hormones in blood for general distribution.
    • Slower response (seconds to days), may continue long after stimulus.
    • Response is based on hormone concentration amplitude.

Major Endocrine Glands

  • List of glands to memorize:
    • Hypothalamus
    • Pineal gland
    • Pituitary gland
    • Thyroid
    • Thymus
    • Parathyroids (posterior part of thyroid)
    • Adrenals
    • Pancreas (islets)
    • Ovaries (female)
    • Testes (male)

Hormone Types and Mechanism of Action

  • Hormones: Chemical messengers that regulate bodily functions.
  • Types:
    • Water-soluble hormones: proteins, peptides.
    • Lipid-soluble hormones: steroids, amino acid derivatives.
  • Receptors:
    • Hormones must bind to specific receptors to work.
    • Cell Interaction categories:
    • Extracellular (membrane-bound receptors).
    • Intracellular (nuclear receptors).

Transport of Hormones

  • Free Hormones: Activate target cells quickly, blood level fluctuates.
  • Bound Hormones:
    • Circulate longer, provide stable hormone levels.
    • Use binding proteins for transport.

Hormonal Regulation Mechanisms

  • Control Mechanisms:
    • Humoral Control: Substances (e.g., glucose, calcium) trigger secretion.
    • Neural Control: Nerve impulses stimulate hormone release (e.g., adrenal medulla releasing epinephrine).
    • Hormonal Control: Hormones from one gland stimulate secretion from another (tropic hormones).

Feedback Mechanism

  • Negative Feedback:
    • Hormone secretion is inhibited by its own effect, ensuring balance.
    • Example: Thyroid hormones inhibit their own production.
  • Positive Feedback:
    • Hormone secretion is amplified by its effect, self-perpetuating.
    • Example: Oxytocin during labor.

Upregulation and Downregulation

  • Receptor Sensitivity:
    • Upregulation: Increased receptors lead to heightened hormone response (e.g., oxytocin receptors in pregnancy).
    • Downregulation: Decreased receptors due to chronic exposure results in reduced response (e.g., insulin in type 2 diabetes).

Target Tissue and Specificity

  • Binding Site: The specific region on a receptor where a hormone binds to elicit a response.
  • Drug Interactions:
    • Agonist: Mimics hormone action (e.g., asthma inhalers mimic epinephrine).
    • Antagonist: Inhibits hormone action (e.g., anti-stroke drugs inhibit epinephrine effects).

Hormone Interactions

  • Types of Interactions:
    • Permissive: One hormone enhances the effect of another.
    • Example: Thyroid hormones support epinephrine and norepinephrine for heart function.
    • Synergistic: Two hormones produce a combined effect.
    • Example: Estrogen and progesterone in reproductive functions.
    • Antagonistic: Opposing effects on the same target (e.g., PTH increases blood calcium, calcitonin decreases).

Endocrine System Integration with the Nervous System

  • Pituitary Gland:
    • Connected to hypothalamus, regulating numerous body functions and integrating endocrine responses.
    • Divisions: Anterior (adenohypophysis) and Posterior (neurohypophysis).

Secretion & Regulation of Pituitary Hormones

  • Posterior Pituitary:
    • Hormones are synthesized in hypothalamus, transported to the posterior pituitary where they are stored and released into circulation.
  • Anterior Pituitary:
    • Regulated by releasing/inhibiting hormones from hypothalamus and secretes hormones that influence other glands.

Key Hormones of the Hypothalamus

  • Growth hormone–releasing hormone (GHRH): stimulates growth hormone secretion.
  • Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH): stimulates thyroid-stimulating hormone secretion.
  • Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH): stimulates adrenocorticotropic hormone secretion.
  • Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH): stimulates luteinizing hormone and follicle-stimulating hormone secretion.