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ENDOCRINOLOGY

ENDOCRINOLOGY. For Biochemistry Diploma Students Faculty of Science Cairo University. Classical definition of a hormone. Chemical messengers Synthesized by living cells and Secreted by a specific gland Secreted directly into the blood stream Carried by the blood

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ENDOCRINOLOGY

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  1. ENDOCRINOLOGY For Biochemistry Diploma Students Faculty of Science Cairo University

  2. Classical definition of a hormone • Chemical messengers • Synthesized by living cells and • Secreted by a specific gland • Secreted directly into the blood stream • Carried by the blood • Acts on a specific target • At a site distant from site of secretion • Secreted in minute quantities • Acts via specific receptors to exert specific actions

  3. New Definition of a Hormone "Any substance released by a cell and which acts on another cell, near or far, regardless of the means of conveyance"

  4. The seven principal glands and their hormones

  5. Some hormones secreted from tissues

  6. Gastrointestinal (luminal) Hormones

  7. General functions of hormones • Control Reproductive processes: differentiation, maturation, gametogenesis. • Growth and development: stimulate or inhibit cellular proliferation • Homeostasis: Maintenance of healthy internal environment in a continuously changing external and internal environments • Metabolism: anabolic and catabolic processes, muscular activity, excretion, reabsorption of ions • Energy production, utilization and storage • Animal behavior: sexual, aggressive and maternal • Other hormones (synthesis, secretion, permissive action)

  8. Classification of hormones according to mode of their delivery • Endocrine: • Neuroendocrine: • Paracrine: • Autocrine: • Luminal: • Pheromone

  9. Classification according toChemical classes of hormones • Protein and polypeptides • Steroids • Tyrosine-derived • Eicosanoids • Vitamins • Miscellaneous group: Gaseous molecules (NO, CO), metabolic substances (glucose, lactic acid), chalones, lumones, pheromones

  10. Polypeptide Hormone

  11. Peptides S S Cys Try Ile Gln Asn Cys Pro Leu Gly

  12. Steroid Hormones Estradiol Testosterone Cortisol Aldosterone Pregnenolone: Progesterone

  13. Tyrosine-derived hormones

  14. Eicosanoids

  15. Vitamin D

  16. Synthesis of Protein Hormones • Transcription of a gene in the nucleus  mRNA • Translationof mRNA by ribosomes on RER  pre-prohormone in ER • Post-translational modification: • Pre-prohormone in ER  prohormone by losing signal peptide sequence • Prohormone migrates to Golgi complex  incorporated into a vesicle • prohormone in vesicle + protease enzymes  hormone

  17. Synthesis of Steroid Hormones Activation of specific enzymes:  acetate  cholesterol  pregnenolone  to the diff hormones. The SER, mitochondria and cytoplasm contain the enzymes required for the transformations

  18. Steroids of the Adrenal Cortex

  19. Synthesis of the male sex hormones

  20. Synthesis of VitaminD They are sterol hormones and have much in common to other steroid hormones Its precursor, cholecalciferol, is obtained from diet or synthesized by the ultraviolet irradiation of provitamin D in the skin Cholecalciferol, by a series of enzymes in the liver and kidney, is hydroxylated to the active hormone, calcitriol

  21. Vitamin D

  22. Synthesis of Tyrosine-derived hormones I.Thyroid hormones: is a unique process • Thyroid cells concentrate iodine • Thyroid cells synthesize a glycoprotein, thyroglobulin • Iodine is oxidized • Iodine is oxidized, then coupled to iodotyrosine within thyroglobulin (organification process) by thyroid peroxidase enzyme • Reuptake of thyroglobulin by endocytosis • Proteolytic digestion by lysosomal enzymes (hydrolyases)  T­3+ T4 (iodothyronines) and MIT+ DIT (iodotyrosines) II. Catecholamines: They are synthesized from tyrosine by a number of enzymes in the cytoplasm and chromaffin granules

  23. Synthesis of Catecholamines

  24. Thyroid Hormone Synthesis

  25. Synthesis of Eicosanoids From fatty acid (arachidonic acid) released from phospholipids in cell membrane by means of a number of enzymes.

  26. Pathways of Eicosanoids Synthesis

  27. Storage • Protein hormones: In secretory granules within the cytoplasm • Steroid hormones: Are not stored. The hormones precursor, cholesterol esters, is the storage form • Tyrosine-derived hormones • Thyroid hormones: in the thyroglobulin • Catecholamines: in secretory chromaffin granules in the cytoplasm + ATP + chromogranin • Eicosanoids: Are not stored. • Vitamin D: Cholecalciferol is stored in adipose tissue. Liver stores its metabolite

  28. Release • Protein hormones: Byexocytosis • Steroid hormones: by diffusion immediately upon synthesis • Vitamin D: by diffusion immediately upon synthesis • Tyrosine – derived hormones: • Thyroid hormones: fusion of lysosomes with colloid droplets, the hormones are released by exocytosis from the basement membrane • Catecholamines: stimulus-secretion coupling requiring Ca, vesicular exocytosis • Eicosanoids: by diffusion

  29. Transport • Protein hormones: mostly unbound, free in the blood • Steroid hormones: Bound to a plasma protein (high- affinity binding to globulin and low-affinity to albumin). Cortisol to transcortin, sex hormones to sex-hormone-binding globulin (SHBG). • Vitamin D: Bound to a globulin (transcalciferin) • Tyrosine-derived hormone: • Thyroid hormones: Mostly bound to thyronine-binding globulin (TBG) or prealbumin (transthyretin) • Catecholamines: Bound to albumin. • Eicosanoids: Are not transported. They act as autocrine or paracrine hormones

  30. Purpose of binding of hormones to proteins: • The hormone is protected from the inactivating systems present in the blood. • The hormone is maintained in a “stored” circulating form to be readily available to its target tissues. • Ensure ubiquitous distribution of the water-insoluble hormones.

  31. Relation between bound and unbound hormone A dynamic equilibrium exists between the concentrations of free (unbound) hormone, plasma protein, and the hormone-protein complex: [H]x[P] [HP] [H]x[P] = K Where K is the dissociation constant [HP]

  32. Peripheral Conversion Some biologically active hormones are converted to other equally active hormones in peripheral tissues such as liver, breast adipose tissue, brain etc Example: Testosterone dihydrotestosterone Thyroxine (T4) triiodothyronine (T3)

  33. Single hormone, different effects. Example: Estradiol acts on ovarian follicles to promote granulosa cell differentiation, on uterus to stimulate its growth and maintain the cyclic change of uterine mucosa, on mammary gland to stimulate ductal growth, on bone to promote linear growth and closure of epiphyseal plates, on HPA to regulate secretion of gonadotropins and prolactin, on metabolic processes to affect adipose tissue distribution, volume of ECF, etc • Several hormones, single function. Example: Release of fatty acids (lipolysis) from adipose tissue stimulated by catecholamines, glucagon, secretin, prolactin and B-lipotropin

  34. Permissive effect of Hormones • It is the effect that some hormones exhibit, these hormones have little effect by themselves, but when they are present they affect other hormones to become fully manifested. • Example: Development of mammary gland, under infleunce of prolactin, estradiol & progesterone and the permissive influence of glucocorticoids, thyroid hormones and insulin

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