Communication
Hormone Stuff
More Hormone Stuff
More hormone Stuff
Regulation
100

What are the methods of cell communication for hormones?

Paracrine and endocrine

100

What is the main difference between endocrine and exocrine glands?

Endocrine: ductless

exocrine: ducted

100

Insulin and glucagon exhibit what type of hormone interaction?

Antagonistic

100

This part of the pituitary gland store hormones.

Posterior Pituitary
100

What two hormones are secreted by th posterior pituitary gland?

ADH and oxytocin

200

What is paracrine cell communication?

Hormones diffuse through extracellular fluid to nearby cells with appropriate receptors

200

Name the 5 endocrine glands in the body.

1. Pituitary

2. pineal

3. thyroid

4. parathyroid

5. adrenal

200

Thyroid strengthens epinephrine's effect upon lipolysis. What type of hormone interaction is this?

permissive
200

What is the major link between the nervous and endocrine system?

Hypothalamus

200

In what two ways is secretion from the anterior pituitary regulated?

1. Releasing and inhibiting hormones from the hypothalamus

2. Negative feedback as levels of hormones secreted by target glands increases, anterior pituitary secretion decreases.

300

What is endocrine communication?

Hormones are carried via the bloodstream to distant cells

300

Explain up-regulation and down-regulation

Up-regulation: Lack of hormones causes an increase in receptors on a cell and thus increased sensitivity to hormones

Down-regulation: Strong response from hormone surplus causes reduced receptor density and thus decreased sensitivity and response to hormones

300
estrogen and LH must both be present for oocyte production. What type of hormone interaction is this?

Synergistic

300
Name three hormones produced by the anterior pituitary gland. (Hint: produced by the "trophs")

1. TSH

2. ACTH

3. FSH and LH

4. Growth Hormone (GH)

5. Prolactin

6. Endorphins

300

What are the five cell types in the anterior pituitary?

1. corticotroph

2. thyrotroph

3. gonadotroph

4. somatotroph

5. lactotroph

400

What is direct cell communication and does this apply to hormones, neurotransmitters, or neither?

Direct movement of small molecules through gap junctions linking cytoplasm of adjacent cells.


Neither

400

Name the three lipid-soluble types of hormones

1. steroid

2. Thyroid (T3 and T4)

3. Nitric Oxide (NO)

400

What three things are hormones regulated by?

1. signals from the nervous system

2. Chemical changes in the blood

3. Other hormones

400

Where are the releasing and inhibiting hormones produced and what do they target?

Production: Neurosecretory cells in the Hypothalamus

Target: Anterior Pituitary

400

The response to a hormone depends on what three things?

1. Hormone's concentration

2. Abundance of target cell receptors

3. Influence exerted by other hormones

500

How do the effects of the nervous and endocrine system differ?

Nervous: Mediator molecule is neurotransmitters, effects occur faster, more briefly, and have a local influence


Endocrine: Mediator molecule is hormones, slower responses, longer-lasting effects, and broader influence

500

How do mechanisms of hormone action differ for lipid-soluble and water-soluble hormones?

Lipid-soluble: bind to receptors inside the target cell

Water-soluble: bind to receptors on plasma membrane causing an intracellular cascade

500

Most hormones are regulated by ______ feedback. Give an example of a hormone NOT regulated in this manner.

Negative, oxytocin

500

What are the three stages of stress response?

1. Initial Fight or Flight

2. Resistance Reaction

3. Exhaustion

500

Are glycoproteins water-soluble or lipid-soluble?

water-soluble