Title: Are hormones involved in regulating''
1Are hormones involved in regulating..
- Your elevated heart rate when you heard about
this mornings pop quiz? - Feeling thirsty?
- A hen incubating her eggs?
- A hungry chick begging?
- A salmon dying after spawning?
- A sparrow attacking his reflection in the window?
- Jetlag?
- Going into labor?
- Low blood sugar?
- Increased calorie burning in response to cold
temperature? - How quickly young animals grow?
2Are hormones involved in regulating..
- Your elevated heart rate when you heard about
this mornings pop quiz? YES (catecholamines) - Feeling thirsty? YES (AVP, aldosterone)
- A hen incubating her eggs? YES (progesterone)
- Hungry chicks begging? YES (corticosterone)
- A salmon dying after spawning? YES
(corticosterone) - A sparrow attacking his reflection in the window?
YES (testosterone) - Jetlag? YES (melatonin)
- Going into labor? YES (oxytocin)
- Low blood sugar? YES (insulin glucagon)
- Increased calorie burning in response to cold
temperature? YES (thyroxine) - How quickly young animals grow? YES (IGFs)
3Why hormones are great to study
- Involved in control of pretty much EVERY
physiological system - Most common way external or internal cues are
converted into a physiological or behavioral
response - Very elegant and effective way to communicate
within an organism - You can study them without killing anything!
4Functions of the endocrine system
- Maintain Internal Homeostasis
- METABOLISM
- OSMOREGULATION
- Regulate Growth and Morphological change
- Coordinate Development
- Coordinate Reproduction
- Facilitate Behavioral and Social interactions
- The primary function of many hormones is to
stimulate release of other hormones (called
tropic and releasing hormones)!
5Endocrine system vs. Nervous system
- Both use chemical secretion to conduct
information. - Major difference mode specificity of delivery
to intended receiver - Nervous system telephone signal goes
straight from sender to receiver along closed
lines (axons). Rapid! - Endocrine system radio signal broadcast
generally (in bloodstream), only receivers with
the properly tuned hardware (receptors) can
receive it. Slower.
6Players in the endocrine system
- Endocrine glands
- Hormones
- Receptors
- Binding globulins
- Target tissues
7Endocrine glands
- In the brain
- Hypothalamus
- Pituitary
- In the rest of the body
- Adrenal glands
- Gonads (testes and ovaries)
- Pancreas
- Thyroids
- Liver
8So what are hormones?
- Molecules secreted by specialized glands that
function as a message within an organism their
only function is to convey information. - Travel from site of production (endocrine cell)
to site of action (target tissue) via blood - Operate by binding to specific receptors only
expressed at target cells
9So what are hormones?
- Not all chemical messengers are hormones!
- Chemical signals WITHIN cells not hormones
- Chemical signals like ions have effects but dont
act via receptors - Several categories of hormones, most commonly
classified by molecular structure - Steroid
- Protein (peptide glycoprotein)
- Structure has major implications for where and
how hormones work!
10Hormone Receptors
- Receptors are proteins that bind a hormone at one
site and initiate cellular activity at another - Their function is to make sure the appropriate
cells respond to the appropriate hormones in the
appropriate way. - Receptors are characterized by 3 things
- Affinity how tightly it binds to a particular
molecule - Specificity how much it prefers to bind one
molecule over other - Capacity how many ligand molecules it can bind
at a time (usually just 1)
11Hormone Receptors
- Question Which combination would be best for an
effective receptor? - High affinity, low specificity
- Low affinity, low specificity
- High affinity, high specificity
12Hormone Receptors
- Question Which combination would be best for an
effective receptor? - High affinity, low specificity
- Low affinity, low specificity
- High affinity, high specificity
- You want receptors to only be bound/activated by
the hormone of interest (high specificity) and
you generally want them to grab ahold tightly
(high affinity) to induce your effect and be
sensitive to low levels of hormone
13Hormone Receptors (cont)
- Receptors are classified by their locations
- 1) Membrane receptors - Embedded in the cell
membrane - Span the phospholipid bilayer
- Hormone binds extracellularly
- Binding alters receptor conformation, transmits
intracellular signal (those famous G-proteins!) - 2) Cytosolic and nuclear receptors - in the
cytoplasm or nucleus (genomic) - Activated receptor binds to DNA and
initiates/alters gene transcription - Hormone must enter cell first
14Hormones Characteristics of hormone families
- Structure
- Synthesis
- Storage Secretion
- Transport
- Mechanisms of Action
- Structure defines the 2 major classes
- Protein hormones
- Steroid hormones
15Protein and peptide hormones
- Structure
- Amino acid chains
- Sequence
- Folded structure
- Can be long or VERY short (lt10aa!)
- Hydrophilic (water soluble)
- Cannot cross cell membranes! (ie no passive
diffusion)
16Protein and peptide hormones
- Synthesis
- Begins with activation of gene transcription to
mRNA - mRNA leaves nucleus, binds ribosome, relocated to
endoplasmic reticulum (ER) - (note lots of RER in protein hormone producing
cells!) - Protein is translated into ER (signal sequence)
- Translational product moves through ER and golgi,
modified (cleavage, glycosylation,
phosphorylation etc)
17Protein hormone synthesis
18Prohormones (protein hormone precursors)
Preprohormone
Signal peptide
Prohormone
Inactive fragment
- Permits fine-tuning of hormone activation
- Prohormone -gt active hormone requires an addition
enzyme that can be localized around target tissue
19Protein hormones
- Storage/Secretion
- Can be stored in vesicles (or granules)
- After synthesis and modification, ends up at the
end of the golgi - Pinches off into either secretory or storage
vesicles - In reponse to proper signal, will be released
from cell by exocytosis - Question why might it be useful to be able to
store hormones until they are needed?
20- Question why might it be useful to be able to
store hormones until they are needed?
21- Question why might it be useful to be able to
store hormones until they are needed?
Answer Protein synthesis takes time! Storage
allows immediate release when needed
22Protein hormones
- Mechanisms of action
- Proteins bind to membrane receptor
extracellularly - Binding induces conformational change in
intracellular part of receptor - Newly exposed site interacts with internal
proteins, initiates cascade of intracellular
messengers - Often results in
- Activation or inactivation of enzymes via
phosphorylation or dephosphorylation - Opening of ion channels
- Many peptide hormones serve to trigger release of
more hormones from target tissue!
23Membrane Receptors
Ligand-binding domain
extracellular
cell membrane
intracellular
Site that interacts with internal proteins
24Active enzyme
Unoccupied receptor
25Summary for protein hormones
- Cant move through membranes
- Synthesized like other proteins
- (DNA, mRNA, ribosomes, RER, golgi)
- Bind extracellular receptors
- Receptors interact with proteins inside cell,
initiate cell-signaling cascades
26Steroid hormone structure
Precursor to ALL steroid hormones
- Small molecules carbon ring structure
- Lipid soluble (hydrophobic)
- Pass easily through cell membranes
- Tiny differences alter function entirely!
27Steroid hormone synthesis
- Always starts with cholesterol (27 carbons)
- Series of enzymes alter steroids, but maintain
fundamental ring structure. - Cholesterol synthesis occurs in smooth ER and
enzymatic conversion occur in mitochondria - Steroid families classified by the number of
carbons in the molecules
28Steroid hormone synthesis
- Example androgen synthesis
- Enzyme names usually describe their effect on the
substrate - Almost all precursors are active hormones
themselves! - Question How could you ensure that you have the
proper steroid at the proper target tissue?
29Steroid hormone synthesis
- Question How could you ensure that you have the
proper steroid at the proper target tissue? - Answer Localize expression of enzymes!
30Steroid hormone storage/secretion
- Cant be contained by cell membranes, therefore
cant really be stored! - Secreted as its produced (constituitive
secretion) rather than being released in
response to stimulus (regulated secretion) - Requires 3-5 min. from stimulus to detectable
increase in plasma
31Steroid Hormone TransportBinding Globulins
- Summary binding globulins help transport
hormones and regulate the amount that is
biologically active. - Steroid hormones often travel through blood bound
to large proteins or globulins - This helps them arrive at target tissues and not
diffuse prematurely out of blood into the wrong
tissues - Hormones bound to globulins cannot be broken
down, but they are also biologically inactive
until released. - Thus bound they cannot trigger physiological
responses. - However, having a lot of steroid bound to
globulins means that one way to rapidly increase
steroid release is to downregulate globulin
levels at target tissues - May function as a temporary storage mechanism
32- Steroid crosses cell membrane into cytoplasm
- Steroid binds cytosolic receptor which is kept
inactive by heat-shock proteins (HSPs) - Binding alters receptor confirmation, releasing
HSPs - Hormone-bound receptors, in the absence of HSPs,
are free to enter nucleus - Active receptors bind directly to DNA and
initiate transcription - mRNA enters cytoplasm and a new protein is
synthesized!
Steroids Mechanisms of Action
33 Question Hormone synthesis
- How does this illustrate protein hormone
synthesis? - How does this illustrate steroid hormone
synthesis?
34 Question Hormone synthesis
- How does this illustrate protein hormone
synthesis? - How does this illustrate steroid hormone
synthesis? - Both entail protein translation. Main difference
is that the translation product is the hormone
itself for protein hormones. - But for steroids, the translation product will be
the ENZYMES that modify chlesterol to make the
hormone.
35Feedback loops
- Positive Feedback Hormones stimulate each other,
product of target cell increases production of
initial hormone which causes even more secretion
of the target cell product - Tend to be rare and shortlived because they can
quickly get out of control! - Negative feedback
- Short- and long-loops.
- Product inhibits further production of self and
of stimulating hormone. - Can operate on multiple levels.