Endocrine System
Apart from the nervous system there is another system that plays a major role in regulation called the endocrine system. The endocrine system is made up of a group of glands which are found at various parts of the body and release chemicals called hormones. Below is Diagram showing the location of these glands. Each gland is responsible for releasing its own chemical (hormone) and hence various jobs from regulating metabolism , growth and reproduction just to name a few..
CELL SIGNALLING (cell communication)
The effect that chemicals have on
certain cells to respond is called cell signaling. These chemicals or hormones are
released into the blood stream and affect specific cells called target cells.
These glands have secreting cells which squirts out the chemicals. How
does the body know which cell should be affected? The target cells have receptors
to receive the hormone. Let’s review the analogy we used in class …
This mode of cell signaling (you might see this term in exam questions) is not only found in the endocrine system
but other cells use it also. For example the nervous system use secreting cells
at the end of terminal bodies and secrete chemicals which affect target cells
with receptors. This is an example of signaling ( communication) over a short distance hence it is referred to
as LOCAL REGULATORS. Here is a few examples
of local regulators.
( a) Gap junction- cell communicate
with other cells that have direct contact.
(b) Autocrine - where the secreting cell affects if self hence it is
also the target cell.
(c) Paracrine - secreting cells affect cells that are close by.
(d) Neurohormone- secreting cells found on the terminal bodies of
the neuron secrete chemicals which travels through the blood and affect target
cells close by.
(e) Neurocrine- secreting cells found on the terminal bodies of the neuron
secrete chemicals which affect target cells at the synapse.
Endocrine- this is a type of
cell signaling however because the signals travels through long distances it is
not classified as a Local regulator. In endocrine signaling secreting cells
release chemicals which travel through the blood that affect target cells.
The diagram below shows the diffrent types of cell signalling.
CHEMICAL
CLASSES OF HORMONES
Steroids- ( lipid soluble) are lipids and include all sex
hormones ( testosterone, estrogen and progesterone) and substances from the
adrenal cortex, such as cortisone. Lipid-soluble hormones diffuse
across cell membranes, travel in the bloodstream bound to transport proteins,
and diffuse through the membrane of target cells.
Table showing the main
differences of water soluble and fat soluble hormones
Water soluble Hormone
|
Fat soluble hormone
|
Polypeptide and amines
|
Steroid hormones
|
Do not pass easily through the
cell membrane ( because the lipid bi-layer of the cell membrane)
|
Pass easily through the cell
membrane
|
Receptors are found on the outside
of the target cell
|
Receptors are found on the inside
of the target cell
|
Diffuses through the blood no
transport protein
|
Travels into the cell by a transport
protein
|
Look at the diagram below: (a) peptides and Amines hormones
- just bind to surface receptors on the outside of target cells (b) Steroid
hormones - need a transport protein to carry it into the target cell were the
receptor is located.