1 / 46

Neurohypophysial Hormones

Neurohypophysial Hormones. Chapter 7. Neurohypophysis. Magnocellular neurons Pars nervosa 2 pr hypothal nuclei (fig 7.1) Hold secretory granules Neurohemal Traverse down infundibular stalk Post pit from neural ectoderm Pituicytes; mostly glial. Neurohypophyseal Hormones.

leanna
Download Presentation

Neurohypophysial Hormones

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Neurohypophysial Hormones Chapter 7

  2. Neurohypophysis • Magnocellular neurons • Pars nervosa • 2 pr hypothal nuclei (fig 7.1) • Hold secretory granules • Neurohemal • Traverse down infundibular stalk • Post pit from neural ectoderm • Pituicytes; mostly glial

  3. Neurohypophyseal Hormones • Oxytocin (OT), Arg Vasopressin (AVP; ADH) • Structurally related • 9 aa’s; disulfide bridge; 3 aa tail (carboxy term) • Genes for precursor prot’s • Chromosome 20 • Gene duplication (?) • Opp DNA strands

  4. Close assoc’n w/ neurohypophysin • Posttransl’n cleavage prod of proprot • Cleavage w/in sec granule • One for each hormone • Complex before excr’n • No physio action • May be transporters • PVN cell bodies mostly prod OT; SON cells bodies mostly prod AVP • Both types found in each region • Species differ

  5. Hormone Release • Stim signals • Body sensory receptors • OT: breast; AVP: blood vessels • Afferent neurons  spinal cord, other pathways  SON, PVN cell bodies • Rostral midbrain connections  SON, PVN • Exc – cholinergic; Inh – noradrenergic • Interneurons near secretory neurons may modulate

  6. Release w/ depol’n axons • Neurosec granules fuse w/ cell membr • Ca impt • Hormones  vessels • OT may encourage own release • OT in SON, PVN  incr’d OT release • PRL impt

  7. Vasopressin Regulates Body Fluids • ECF/ICF • Homeostasis  protection ICF, cell components • IVF easiest to control • Why blood? • Why maintain blood pressure?

  8. BP can be maintained through IVF vol • Or through art smooth muscle contraction • Fluid vol control through kidney • Prox tubule: most reabs’n most water, electrolytes • Luminal membr renal endothelium has water channels (aquaporins) • Distal tubule, collecting duct can become permeable to water w/ hormonal signal • Vasopressin

  9. Vasopressin • Human arg in position 8 • Coexpressed w/ CRH in parvocell paraventric neurons • Potentiates CRH response @ corticotrophs • Can function as neurotransmitter • Antipyretic (lowers body temp) • Receptors heptahelical, G-prot coupled

  10. Osmoregulation • If incr’d body fluid osmolality (mostly Na) •  stim’n hypothal osmoreceptors • Not related to SON, PVN prod’ng cell bodies • Sensitive to blood [electrolyte] changes • Stim’d @ plasma osmolality >280 mOsm/kg • Specific • NaCl, sucrose • Not glucose, urea •  AVP rel’d

  11. If decr’d blood vol, pressure •  stim’n baroreceptors • Heart LA, aortic arch, carotid sinus • Afferent signal  vagal, glossopharyngeal nerves • Stim’n when bp decr’d >8% •  AVP released

  12. Other AVP regulators • Renin-angiotensin system • Na, so fluid osmolarity • CNS symp input • Book: both receptor signals impinge on AVP-producing cell bodies • Overall: AVP  incr’d bp by • Retention of water • Incr’d contraction vasc smooth muscle

  13. Mechanism of Vasopressin Action • In kidney collecting duct epithelium • V2 renal receptor; ad cyclase coupled • Four subtypes • Others through inositol/Ca • Book: toad bladder model • Epith sheet • Basal water barrier @ mucosal side • Analogous to renal tubule lumen • Other: serosal

  14. AVP @ serosal side •  change in water permeability •  barrier decr’d •  water transport mucosal to serosal • Withdrawal AVP  reversal

  15. In nephron collecting duct • Basal level water barrier @ luminal (apical) side • Endothelial cell vesicles in subapical area • Contain prot’s that can form water channels (aquaporins) • Membr-integral prot’s • 9 identified • Type 1 (AQ1) in prox tubule • Type 2 aquaporins • Exclusive to renal collecting duct endothelium • Biosynth • By AVP • Via CREB-mediated transcrn’l control

  16. AVP interaction w/ V2 receptor (fig 7.15) •  ad cyclase activation •  incr’d cAMP •  act’n PKA  phosph’n AQP2 mol’s •  translocation vesicles • Actin filaments, dynein •  fusion endosomal vesicles w/ apical membr •  AQP2 insertion into apical membr’s • PKA act’n also stim’s synth AQP2 prot’s • Through cAMP-linked Response Element

  17. Now water moves w/ concent gradient • Dilute urine  collecting duct endothelial cells • Another AQP (type 3; also 4?) found in basal (serosal) membr • Allow water  ISF  IVF • ISF here highly concentrated • Antiparallel to ascending limb of nephron loop • Impt to urine concent • AQP3 induced w/ dehydr’n (not linked w/ AVP) • AVP also regulates urea concent in kidney medulla (impt to urine concent)

  18. AVP also • Stim’s release ACTH  release cortisol • Synergistic w/ CRH • Stim’s release TSH; may regulate • Equipotent w/ TRH • AVP incr’s bp by regulating contraction vasc smooth muscle • Through tyr phosphorylation of enzyme-active receptor • V1 vascular receptor

  19. Oxytocin Activity Related to Reproduction • Several functions • Milk release • Uterine contraction at parturition • Vascular smooth muscle response • Maternal/mating behavior • Most specific to females • Transitory

  20. Oxytocin Hormone • Nonapeptide • Secr’n stim’d by • Cervicovaginal stretch receptor act’n • Stim’n nipple, clitoris • Psychosensory input (lactating women) • Dehydration, stress (AVP) • Secr’n inhib’d by • Ethanol

  21. OT receptor • Encoded by chromosome 3 • Heptahelical • G-prot coupled (Gaq) • PLC signaling pathway  incr’d Ca (from stores + extracell)

  22. At Mammary Gland • Suckling •  act’n sensory nerve endings •  afferent signals through spinal cord  hypothal •  OT release • OT  mammary gland myoepithelial cells (fig 7.4, 7.5) • Binding OT receptors  incr’d intramammary pressure •  milk expresion to ducts, alveoli, nipples

  23. At Uterus • Descent fetus •  cervical/vaginal stretch receptor act’n •  OT release from post pit • Positive feedback mech til birth • Get incr in both freq, amplitude of contractions

  24. Near parturition (20-39 wks), uterine myometrium more sensitive to OT • E2  incr’d OT uterine receptors  incr’d OT sensitivity • Progesterone low; can suppress OT receptor synth • BUT circ’ng OT not nec for labor initiation, maintenance • Uterine OT mRNA incr’d more in pregnancy than hypothal (rat) • Uterus may be autocrine

  25. OT binding myometrium receptors •  inhib’n Ca ATPase  Ca out of intracell stores •  IP3 involvement  Ca out of intracell stores • (with incr’d intracell Ca) act’n Ca membr channels •  depol’n myometrial cells  open voltage-gated channels •  influx extracell Ca

  26. Prolonged elevation intracell Ca •  calmodulin act’n •  kinase act’n •  phosph’n myosin •  contraction

  27. Also OT interacts w/ receptors in both myometrium + endometrium •  synth PGF2a (ovine endometrium) • Incr smooth muscle contraction • Estrogens  incr’d activity PG synthetase, so enhance PGF2a • OT-induced myometrial contractions also  endometrial PGF2a induction

  28. Progesterone involvement • Antagonizes estrogen effects • Maintains endometrium (pregnancy) • Is maintained by CL • OT  uterus  PG’s •  CL  luteal regression •  decr’d progesterone •  depress maintenance of pregnancy

  29. Also, now decr’d progesterone  decr’d antagonism of estrogen effects •  incr’d PGF2a in endometrium, •  incr’d OT-induced PGF2a in myometrium • Overall, incr’d uterine contraction

  30. Vascular Smooth Muscle • OT may constrict or relax • Depends on site • May be distinct receptor types for 2 responses • Some cross-over w/ AVP • More OT receptors in umbilical vasc • More AVP receptors in aorta vasc

  31. Maternal Behavior • OT  incr’d maternal behavior in virgin females (rat) • May need E2 • Ovariectomization negates effect • OT may be rel’d @ many brain sites at parturition • Acts as neurotransmitter • Inhibits memory/retrieval (?) • Opp AVP • Block recall pain of labor

  32. Mating Behavior/Sexual Response • Hypothal VMN controls some female mating behavior • E2  induction OT receptors • Progesterone •  incr’d OT receptor binding •  expansion brain area covered by receptors • Plasma [OT] incr’d during sexual arousal (human) • Female – incr’d uterine, vaginal smooth muscle • Male – incr’d repro smooth muscle contraction

  33. Other OT Activities • Inhib CRH-mediated ACTH secr’n (human male) • Stress response? • Stim release PRL • PRL needed to produce milk • Book: control feeding behavior

More Related