Title: Measuring Hormones
1Measuring Hormones
- Radioimmunoassay - hormone is labeled with
radioactivity and combined with antibody for that
hormone. Non-labeled hormone sample is added. - Allows for the detection of hormones in minute
concentrations and with a high degree of
specificity. - Increased accuracy of diagnosis of pathologies
characterized by hormonal excess or deficiency. - Research- greatly enhanced our understanding of
how hormones work
2Measuring Hormones
- Doctor runs blood panel, hormones measured by
RIA. - High pituitary hormones might suggest a pituitary
adenoma - High thyroid hormone can be an indicator of
Graves disease - body makes antibodies that actually bind and
stimulate TSHR, stimulating thyroid hormone
production - Causes goiter (thyroid hyperplasia), wasting, and
difficulty concentrating - Low thyroid hormone hypothyroid
- Fertility problems, measure reproductive hormones
3Displacement Curve
4Measuring Hormone Receptors
- Research
- Many cancers are responsive to hormone.
- Hormone receptors are often quantified in breast
cancer biopsies. - Receptor positive
- Receptor negative
- Important because progesterone and estrogen, not
only regulate normal breast development, but also
breast cancer progression. - Progesterone and estrogen can stimulate breast
cancer cell proliferation - These cancers often respond to treatment with
progesterone or estrogen antagonists (ex.
Tamoxifen)
5Hormone-Receptor Interaction
- Kd - dissociation constant - equilibrium constant
the measures the likelihood of a complex
(hormone-receptor) to separate reversibly into
smaller components - Inverse of affinity constant (Ka)
- Same as in biochemistry
- Receptors bind specific hormones with very high
affinity (Kd 10-8 to 10-12 M) - This means that at 10-8 M of hormone, half of the
receptors for that hormone will be bound. - Hormones also have a particular Kd for their
binding proteins
Kd H R HR
Ka HR HR
6RAI vs. Scatchard Plot
- Both
- Use radioactively labeled hormone
- RIA
- Measures hormone
- Involves hormone binding to antibody
- Scatchard Plot
- Measures receptors
- Involves hormone binding to receptors
7PHSL 410 - Endocrine
- Lecture 3
- Neuroendocrinology
- Posterior Pituitary
8The Pituitary Gland is Made up of 3 Lobes
optic chiasm
Hypothalamus
hypothalamus
pituitary gland
- Maintain homeostasis
- Growth Control
- Fertility
- Lactation
- Stress management
IL
AL
PL
http//www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks/pathphys/endo
crine/hypopit/sagpitbig.jpg
9- Anterior pituitary (adenohypophysis)
- Secretes peptide hormones ACTH, GH, THS, FSH,
LH, PRL. - Stimulated by releasing hormones from
hypothalamus - Small-diameter neurons, cell bodies in
hypothalamus, synapse at portal veins and secrete
releasing hormones - Posteroir pituitary (neurophypophysis)
- Secretes arginine vasopressin (ADH) and
oxcytocin. - Large-diameter neurons, cell bodies in
hypothalamus, synapse in posterior pituitary
10Control of Multiple Endocrine Organs
- The hypothalamus and pituitary control a number
of endocrine organs. - The pituitary bridges and integrates neural and
endocrine systems. - Pituitary portal system - carries neuropeptides
(releasing hormones) from hypothalamus and
pituitary stalk to the anterior pituitary.
11Pituitary hormone production
Somatotropes
Lactotropes
Corticotropes
Gonadotropes
Thyrotropes
FSHb
Prl
GH
TSHb
POMC
LHb
Growth Hormone
Follicle Stimulating LuteinizingHormones
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone
Prolactin
ACTH
Liver and other organs
Adrenal Gland
Thyroid
Mammary Glands
Gonads
12Releasing Hormones
- Produced from small-diameter neurons in
hypothalamus - Control secretion of peptide hormones from
anterior pituitary (GH, TSH, ACTH, LH, FSH, PRL). - Are discharged into median eminence and neural
stalk where they enter pituitary portal veins and
are taken to anterior pituitary.
13Pituitary Portal System
- A portal system is a system that begins and ends
in capillaries - Pituitary Portal System supplies blood to the
anterior lobe of the pituitary. - Hormones travel from capillaries of median
eminence through veins to capillaries of anterior
lobe (2 capillary beds). - Results in a significant reduction in the
necessary production of hypothalamic releasing
hormones.
14Hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal Axis
Hypothalamus
GnRH (releasing hormone)
Pituitary -gonadotrope cells
LH/FSH
Gonad
Sex Steroids
15Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal Axis
Hypothalamus
CRH (releasing hormone)
Pituitary -corticotrope cells
ACTH
Adrenal gland
Cortisol
16Hypothalamic and Anterior Pituitary Hormones
17Hypothalamic and Posterior Pituitary Hormones
18Pituitary organogenesis
P Posterior, I Intermediate, A Anterior
19Pituitary diseasessignificance of studying
pituitary
- Hormone deficiency
- 1/4000 births
- IGHD GH
- CPHD transcription factor defects
- syndromic CPHD involves head development treatm
ent hormone replacement - Pituitary adenomas
- commonly found at autopsy
- 30 detected tumors invasive, 1 metastatic
- genetics not well understood
- treatment surgery, drugs
20How many transcription factors does it take to
build a pituitary gland?
Pitx1,2
ACTH
GH
Lhx3,4
Tpit
NeuroD
Rpx
Prop1
Pit1
PRL
Foxl2 (forkhead)
Sf1
TSH
LH/FSH
21Test Question
- Bromocriptine, a dopamine (DA) receptor agonist
(it act like DA on the DA receptor), is often
used to treat hyperprolactinemia. What is its
most likely mechanism of action based on your
knowledge of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis - a. stimulation of the release of a hypothalamic
prolactin inhibiting factor - b. inhibition of the release of a hypothalamic
prolactin stimulating factor - c. a direct inhibitory action on pituitary
lactotrophs (prolactin secreting cells)
22Bromocriptine, a dopamine (DA) receptor agonist
(it act like DA on the DA receptor), is often
used to treat hyperprolactinemia. What is its
most likely mechanism of action based on your
knowledge of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis?
- a. stimulation of the release of a hypothalamic
prolactin inhibiting factor
Name a hypothalamic prolactin inhibiting factor.
Where are dopamine receptors located?
23Bromocriptine, a dopamine (DA) receptor agonist
(it act like DA on the DA receptor), is often
used to treat hyperprolactinemia. What is its
most likely mechanism of action based on your
knowledge of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis?
- a. stimulation of the release of a hypothalamic
prolactin inhibiting factor
24Bromocriptine, a dopamine (DA) receptor agonist
(it act like DA on the DA receptor), is often
used to treat hyperprolactinemia. What is its
most likely mechanism of action based on your
knowledge of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis?
- b. inhibition of the release of a hypothalamic
prolactin stimulating factor
Is there a hypothalamic prolactin stimulating
factor?
25Bromocriptine, a dopamine (DA) receptor agonist
(it act like DA on the DA receptor), is often
used to treat hyperprolactinemia. What is its
most likely mechanism of action based on your
knowledge of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis?
- b. inhibition of the release of a hypothalamic
prolactin stimulating factor
26Bromocriptine, a dopamine (DA) receptor agonist
(it act like DA on the DA receptor), is often
used to treat hyperprolactinemia. What is its
most likely mechanism of action based on your
knowledge of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis?
- c. a direct inhibitory action on pituitary
lactotrophs (prolactin secreting cells)