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Exam 2 Notes

The document provides an overview of the digestive system, including its main components and processes. It discusses the alimentary canal and accessory organs. Within the alimentary canal, it describes the mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine. For each section, it outlines the layers, movements, secretions, and digestive roles. The accessory organs discussed are the liver, gallbladder, and pancreas. It explains bile production and emulsification of fat, as well as pancreatic juice and the production of zymogens. Absorption primarily occurs in the small intestine by nutrients crossing epithelial membranes.

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Clara Pianalto
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
69 views36 pages

Exam 2 Notes

The document provides an overview of the digestive system, including its main components and processes. It discusses the alimentary canal and accessory organs. Within the alimentary canal, it describes the mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine. For each section, it outlines the layers, movements, secretions, and digestive roles. The accessory organs discussed are the liver, gallbladder, and pancreas. It explains bile production and emulsification of fat, as well as pancreatic juice and the production of zymogens. Absorption primarily occurs in the small intestine by nutrients crossing epithelial membranes.

Uploaded by

Clara Pianalto
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 36

PHYSIOLOGY

EXAM 2

Lecture 9/11

Digestive System in two categories

1. Alimentary Canal (GI tract): tube where food and chyme passes; mouth  pharynx 
esophagus  stomach  small intestine  large intesting
2. Accessory Structures: aid in breakdown of food; liver, gallbladder, pancreas, salivary glands

Alimentary Canal

- Made of four layers


- Lumen: hole that food/chyme passes through
1. Mucosa
a. made of epithelium (direct contact)
b. lamina propria (made of blood vessels and lymphatic vessels), mucosa (associated with
lymphatic tissue or MALT)
i. MALT = immune response
c. Muscularis mucosae: smooth muscle
i. Causes folding and increases the surface area
2. Submucosa: contains blood vessels and lymphatic vessels; also composed of submucosal glands
a. Submucosal glands = release digestive (juices?)
3. Muscularis: necessary for movement of food and chyme and its mechanical digestion
a. Circular muscle
b. Longitudinal muscle
4. Serosa: holds organism in place
a. Areolar connective tissue
b. Epithelium

Digestive Processes

- Ingestion = entry of food into the alimentary canal


- Propulsion = movement of food/chyme
o Peristalsis = alternating waves of contraction and relaxation of the muscularis layer
of the alimentary canal
- Mechanical digestion = breaking down food into smaller pieces
o Mastication = chewing
o Segmentation = like peristalsis; contraction of muscularis layer with back and forth
movement.
- Chemical Digestion = enzymes breakdown food into smaller and smaller molecules into
small building blocks
- Absorption = primarily done in small intestine; movement of nutrients from alimentary canal
into the blood  once in blood nutrients go where the need to
- Defecation = elimination of undigested materials
Alimentary Canal

Mouth

- Other accessory organs


o Teeth: aid in mastication; mechanical digestion of food
o Tongue: moves the chewed food into a bolus and swallows the bolus; synthesizes
and secretes enzymes
o Salivary glands: secrete saliva which has ions, glycoproteins, enzymes, waste
products, water, and lysosomes  these maintain the pH of the saliva and
lubricates the bolus so its easier to swallow
- Enzymes are produced in the mouth = chemical digest
o Salivary amylase  breakdown starches
 Active in mouth, pharynx, and esophagus
 Becomes inactive in the stomach
o Lingual lipase = breakdown lipinds
 Inactive in the mouth
 Active in the stomach

Pharynx

- Bolus enters the pharynx and esophagus after the mouth


- Both air and food

Esophagus

- Bolus must pass through the upper esophageal sphincter FIRST


o Controls the movement of food from the pharynx into the esophagus
o Mainly composed of skeletal muscle (allows us to decide when to swallow)
- Upper 2/3 is composed of both skeletal and smooth muscle
o Skeletal = voluntary
o Smooth = involuntary
- Bolus undergoes peristalsis at the point
- Lower 1/3 of the esophagus is mainly smooth muscle
o Decrease in skeletal muscle moving down the esophagus
- Lower esophageal sphincter
o Only smooth muscle
o Functions to prevent stomach juices from entering the esophagus

Stomach

- Top end of the stomach is the fundus


- Most of the stomach is the body
o Contains rugae/folding  allows for stomach to stretch when it is full
- Way out of the stomach is the pylorus region
- Next to the pylorus region is the pyloric sphincter
o Exit out of the stomach and into the small intestine
- Most of the stomach is made of surface mucus cells
o Secrete surface mucus that is alkaline
o Alkaline helps with the control of gastric acids so the acids don’t hurt the stomach
wall
- Gastric pits line the stomach wall
o Composed of parietal cells that secrete hydrochloric acid
 HCL kills the microorganisms that we cell
 Also secretes intrinsic factor = necessary for the absorption of B12
o Mucus neck cells = secretes different mucus than surface; unknown function
o Chiefs cells: synthesize and secrete pepsinogen, the inactive form of pepsin
o Enteroendocrine cells: secrete various hormones (ex. Gastrin from G-cells)
- What digestive processes occur in the stomach?
o Propulsion
o Mechanical (gastric mixing)
o Chemical (enzymes like pepsin and gastric lipase and lingual lipase)
- Stomach empties through gastric emptying
o Goes out the pyloric sphincter ~30 mL at a time
o 2-4 to completely empty

Small intestine

- Fenum
- Jejunum
- Ileum
- What occurs in the small intestine?
o Propulsion
o Chemical digestion
o Mechanical digestion (segmentation)
o Absorption – biggest primary function of small intestine
- Circular folds: inc surface to inc absorption
- Vili: inc surface area
o Microvilli/brush border: contains enzymes that break down and chemically digest
chyme
- Goblet Cell: secretes mucus
- Crypt of lieberkhan: secretes intestinal juices that help with buffering gastric acids from
stomach

Large intestine:

- Ileocecal valve/sphincter
- Cecum: blind alley gut
- Veriform appendix: vestigial organ; seed of microbiota of gut
- Ascending colon:
- Transverse colon:
- Descending colon:
- Sigmoid colon:
- Rectum
- Anal canal
- Main function to finish absorption of nutrients and reabsorb as much water as possible
o Reabsorbing water allows feces to form
o Then feces are eliminated
o Make certain vitamins
- Digestive processes?
o Absorption
o Mechanical digestion
 mass movement – strong contraction that move chyme
 haustral contractions – sluggish segmentation
o propulsion (peristalsis)

lecture 9/14

Accessory Organs

- liver: heavy lifting; many functions and secretions


1. secretes bile
2. removes old RBC
3. processes metabolic nutrients after meals
a. excess glucose  stored as glycogen
b. turn some amino acids into fatty acids
c. synthesize triglycerides and cholesterol
4. processes metabolic nutrients between meals
a. turn glycogen  glucose
b. AA  glucose
c. Fatty acids  ketones  energy sources
5. Synthesizes hormones
6. Synthesizes plasma proteins
7. Helps with elimination of waste
8. Stores essential molecules
- gallbladder: storing and concentrating bile

Bile Salts

- synthesized in liver from cholesterol


- secreted in bile to duodenum
- amphipathic molecule (nonpolar and polar parts)
- main function: emulsify fat

Emulsification of fat globule

- turns a really big fat globule  many little fat droplets


o creates an increase of surface
- nonpolar parts interact with the fat while the polar parts interact with water
o allows water to surround the little fat droplets

Pancreas: synthesizes the pancreatic juice

- components of pancreatic juice


o zymogens: inactive enzymes that breakdown proteins (proteases)
o bicarbonate buffer juice: buffer gastric juice
o colipase: helps load lipase onto fats
o pancreatic amylase: starch breakdown
o pancreatic lipase: breakdown fats

Zymogens

- inactive storage form of proteases produced via exocrine acinar cells of the pancreas
o trypsinogen
o chymotrypsinogen
o procarboxypeptidase
- Stored in zymogen granules (secretory vesicles)
- Secreted by exocytosis from acinar
- Activated in small intestine by proteolytic activation
- Pancreatic duct binds with bile duct
o When joined together = ampulla of vader
- Has to pass through the sphincter of oddi to enter the duodenum

How are zymogens produced?

- DNA  mRNA  peptide in RER  travels to the golgi apparatus  packaged into
secretory vesicles (zymogen vesicles)  exocytosed into pancreatic duct  ampulla of
vader  through sphincter of oddi  duodenum of small intestine  activated through
proteolytic activation  able to chemical digest more proteins

Proteases = hydrophilic

- Left through exocytosis (if hydrophobic they would’ve diffused through the membrane)

Lecture 9/14

Most absorption occurs in the small intestine

First digested in lumen  nutrients cross the apical membrane into the epithelial cell  leave epithelial
cell through the basolateral membrane  nutrients can enter the bloodstream and go throughout the
body

Amylase: generic term for the enzymes that breakdown polysaccharides

- Secreted and synthesized in the salivary glands


o Salivary glands = salivary amylase
o Pancreas = pancreatic amylase
- Starch/glycogen  maltose + limit (alpha) dextrins (brush border enzymes)
o Starch = from plants
o Glycogen = skeletal and liver muscles
o Maltose broken by maltase into 2 glucose
o Limit (alpha) dextrins broken by dextrinase into glucose

Absorption of carbohydrates

- Only monosaccharides can be absorbed


o Glucose, galactose, fructose
- Absorption crosses two membranes
o Apical first (glucose = secondary active transport)
o Basolateral second (glucose = facilitated diffusion)
- Glucose movement
o Concentration gradient from sodium potassium pump
 Needs to hydrolyze ATP
 Primary active transport
 Need Na lower inside cell; allows Na to go down its gradient from the lumen
into the epithelial cell
 Allows glucose to go from low concentration to high concentration
 Glucose uses secondary active transport with Na (Cotransport w Na)
 High gluc inside cell and low glucose outside the basolateral membrane
transport (passive transport = facilitated diffusion to cross basolateral
membrane)
o Galactose uses same mechanism
- Fructose movement
o Uses facilitated diffusion for BOTH apical and basolateral

Proteins

- Typical diet: 125g/day protein


o Only require 40-50 g
- Proteins to be digested and absorbed include
o Consumed in diet
o Secreted into lumen of intestinal tract (e.g. enzymes)
o Sloughed off with cells lining intestinal tract (e.g. enterocytes)
- Proteases = breakdown proteins
- Protein digestion products
o Amino acids
o Dipeptides (two AA’s)
o Tripeptides (3 AA’s)

Types of Proteases

- Endopeptidases
o Endo = in
o Split polypeptide at interior peptide bond
o Product = small peptide fragments (tripeptides and dipeptides
- Exopeptidases
o Exo = out
o Cleave off amino acids from one end of polypeptide
o Product = individual amino acids

Overview: Protein Digestion in GI tract

- Zymogens = inactive proteases


o Trypsinogen
o Chymotrypsinogen
o Procarboxypeptidase
o Elastase
- Pancreatic proteases (actives of the zymogens)
o Trypsin
o Chymotrypsin
o Carboxypeptidase
- Stomach protease (1)
o Pepsinogen (inactivated)
o Pepsin (activated)
- Brush border proteases
o Peptidases (e.g. aminopeptidase, dipeptidase)
o Enteropeptidase (enterokinase)

Protein Digestion in the stomach

- Gastric pits
o Parietal cells = HCl secretion to kill off microorganisms and intrinsic factor for B12
absorption
o Chief cells = create pepsinogen (inactive form of pepsin)
o HCl released by parietal cells  half activates pepsinogen  converts more
pepsinogen into pepsin  pepsin breaks down protein into smaller peptide
fragments (endopeptidase)

Protein digestion in small intestine

- Smaller peptide fragments go through the pyloric sphincter  into the small intestine
- Pancreatic proteases
o Trypsin
o Chymotrypsin
o Carboxypeptidase
- Brush border proteases
o Aminopeptidase
o Enterokinase

Activations of Zymogens
- Zymogens from acinar cells are released into the duodenum of small intestine 
trypsinogen makes way to enterokinase (=enteropeptidase)  trypsinogen converted into
trypsin  trypsin converts chymotrypsinogen into chymotrypsin  Trypsin also converts
procarboxypeptidase into carboxypeptidase  gives three active proteases
- Give protein trypsin = smaller peptides (endopeptidase)
- Give protein chymotrypsin = smaller peptides (endopeptidase)
- Give protein carboxypeptidase = individual amino acids (exopeptidase)
- Give protein pepsin = smaller peptide

Absorption of Amino Acids

- Na/K pump = primary active transport


- AA’s across apical membrane = secondary active transport (cotransport)
- AA’s across basolateral membrane = facilitated diffusion
- Set up chemical gradient for Na w sodium-potassium pump  Na out of cell and K+ into cell
 AA’s allowed to go against their gradient  high AA inside cell and low in interstitial fluid
 leave cell using facilitated diffusion across basolateral membrane  brush border
enzyme (aminopeptidase/dipeptidase) converts tri/dipeptides into individual amino acids

Absorption of Dipeptides and Tripeptides

- Secondary cotransport of H ions to allow di/tripeptides to go from low to high


concentrations (cotransport) across apical into the epithetlial  cytoplasmic peptidases
break them into individual amino acids  AA’s can leave basolateral membrane via
facilitated diffusion

Lipids

- Typical diet: 25-160 g lipids


o 90% triglycerides
- Lipids face special problem in digestion
o Not water soluble
o Doesn’t mix with stomach/intestinal contents
o Forms fat droplets

Lipid digestion

- Lipases = lipid digestion enzymes


o Water soluble; can only act on molecules near edge of fat droplet
- Bile salts increase surface area of droplets by breaking large droplet into several small
droplets = emulsification
o Made in liver from cholesterol
- Colipase = needed to help load lipase onto the lipid
- Lingual lipase = isn’t activated until stomach
- Gastric lipase = s/s from stomach
- Pancreatic lipase = s/s pancreas
- Colipase = s/s pancreas **not enzyme = doesn’t digest lipids
- Bile = made in liver; stored and concentrated in gall bladder **not enzyme
- Lipoprotein lipase = blood

Action of Bile salts and Colipase

- Bile salts = emulsify fats  gives higher surface area to allow H2O lipase to do job
- Colipase = moves bile salts out of way and help load on lipase

Lipid Digestion

- Start with triglyceride  pancreatic lipase breaks into monoglyceride and free fatty acids (1
glycerol and 3 fatty acids)
- Bile salts and colipase enter small intestine from gall bladder and pancreas  bile salts
emulsify fat droplets  allows lipase to digest into fatty acids and monoglycerides  form
micelles (=loose aggregations) because both are lipophilic and hydrophobic  can fit into
microvilli

Absorption of Lipids

- Micelles release monoglyceride and fatty acids when close to villi/microvilli 


monoglycerides and fatty acids simple diffusion across apical membrane  enter smooth ER
in the epithelial cells where they are reassembled into triglycerides  triglycerides go into
the golgi apparatus where other proteins/lipids are added  turn them into a chylomicron
(hydrophilic/lipophobic)  leave basolateral membrane in secretory vesicles via exocytosis
 too large to enter the capillary  enters the lacteal of lymphatic system  chylomicrons
are dumped into the blood  lipoprotein lipase breaks them down into monoglycerides and
fatty acids  can enter cells via simple diffusion

What happens to the bile salts?

- Expensive to make
- Enterohepatic circulation
- We will reabsorb them in the ileum of the small intestine  those bile salts will then make
their way back to liver/gallbladder to be stored

Absorption of Vitamins

- Fat-soluble vitamin (A,D,E, and K)


o Absorbed with lipids
o Dissolve in micelles; simple diffusion
- Water-soluble Vitamins (B and C)
o Require special carrier proteins
- Vitamin B12
o Absorbed only when bound to intrinsic factor
 s/s from parietal cells in stomach

Absorption of Minerals: Calcium

- actively absorbed in duodenum and jejunum


o binds to brush border protein = calcium binding protein
 transported into the epithelial cell
o transported out of cell across basolateral membrane by Ca2+ pumo
- Hormones play a role

Absorption of Water

- Water in GI tract
o 7 liters from GI secretions
o 2 liters intake
- Water absorption is positive
- Water follows absorption of solutes by osmosis
o Hypotonic lumen  hypertonic blood

Mostly occurs in the Large intestine

Lecture 9/16

Metabolism = sum of all metabolic processes in the body

Anabolic = small molecules to larger molecules

Catabolic = large molecules to small molecules

ATP = nucleotide consisting of adenine, ribose sugar, and 3 phosphate groups

Oxidation-reduction reactions

- Oxidation = losing electrons


- Reduction = gaining
- (oil rig)

Glucose = hexose sugar that humans use as an immediate source of energy

Glycogen = storage form of glucose in animals (liver or skeletal muscle)

Hormonal Regulation of Metabolism

- Catabolic hormones = hormones involved in the breakdown of large molecules


o Cortisol
o Glucagon = released from alpha cells of the pancreas promotes glycogen  glucose
via glycogenolysis which results in a raised blood sugar level
o Epinephrine
 Adrenaline
- Anabolic Hormones = building of large molecules from smaller molecules
o Growth Hormone
o Insulin-like growth factor
o Insulin = released from the beta cells in the pancreas and promotes glucose 
glycogen via of glycogenesis which lowers the blood sugar level
o Testosterone
o Estrogen

Cells Need ATP

- Powers nearly every activity requires energy input


o Chemical reactions
o Development from a fertilized egg
o Breathing
o DNA synthesis
o Digestion
o Reproduction
o Cell division
o Movement
- Mitochondria produces ATP

What happens if a cell lacks ATP?

- The cell will die

Sources of ATP

- Food intake  Proteins, complex carbs, triglycerides


- Complex carbs most commonly used
- Starch  broken down into glucose  absorbed into the body  some will enter blood and
excess amounts will be turned into glycogen  if we lack carbs then the body will break
down stored fat (triglyceride)  if out of both the body will cannibalize itself and
breakdown proteins

Key Players: ATP

- When ATP undergoes hydrolysis it will break into ADP + Energy

Electron Carrier Molecules

- NADH, Nicotine Adenine dinucleotide


o NAD+  NADH is reduction
o NADH  NAD+ is oxidation
- FADH2, Flavin Adenine dinucleotide
o Produced from riboflavin (Vitamin B2)
o FAD+  FADH2 is reduction
o FADH  FAD+ is oxidation

Enzymes
- Substrate-level phosphorylation (SLP): ATP production by direct enzymatic transfer of
phosphate from an intermediate substrate to ADP
- “typical enzyme catalyzed reaction” = substrate binding to enzyme and products are
released

Carbohydrate metabolism

- Ingest pasta  breakdown begins in mouth from salivary amylase  pasta makes way to
through stomach into pancreas  pancreas releases pancreatic amylase  amylase turns
starch into maltose and limit (alpha) dextrins  brush border enzymes maltase and
dextrinasse turn them into glucose  glucose will pass through the apical membrane using
secondary co-transport with sodium  uses facilitated diffusion to get across the
basolateral membrane  into cell to become ATP  if excess glucose and ATP it will go to
liver and skeletal muscle to be stored as glycogen via glycogenesis

Presence of O2

- Complete oxidation
- Aerobic respiration (4 different pathways)
o Glycolysis
o Pyruvate oxidation
o Krebs cycle/TCA cycle/citric acid cycle
o Oxidative phosphorylation
 Electron transport chain
 Chemiosmotic coupling

No O2

- Incomplete oxidation
- Anaerobic respiration (2 pathways)
o Glycolysis
o Fermentation

Overview of Carbohydrate Metabolism

**don’t need to know steps in each pathway

- Know what goes in and what comes out**

First Pathway: Glycolysis

- Enters:
o One glucose
o Two ATPs
o Two NAD+
o 4 ADPs
- Exits:
o Two ADP
o Two pyruvates
o Two NADH
o Four ATP
- Net:
o Two pyruvates
o Two ATP
o Two NADH
- Occurs within the cytoplasm

Second Pathway: Linking step, Pyruvate Oxidation

- Pyruvate made in glycolysis will enter the mitochondrial matrix  reduce NAD+ to NADH 
turn pyruvate into Acetyl CoA by adding Coenzyme A
- Enter:
o Two pyruvate
o Two NAD+
o 2 CoA
- Exit:
o 2 Co2
o 2 NADH
o 2 Acetyl CoA

Third Pathway: Krebs cycle

- Acetyl CoA from pyruvate oxidation enters the krebs cycle  enzymatic reactions reduce 3
NAD+ into NADH and one FAD+ into FADH2 and produce one ATP
- Enter:
o 2 Acetyl CoA
o 6 NAD+
o 2 FAD+
o 2 ADP

- Exit:
o 2 CoA
o 6 NADH
o 2 FADH
o 2 ATP
o CO2 byproduct

Fourth pathway: Oxidative phosphorylation


- Two different pathways
o Electron transport chain
o Chemiosmotic couples
 NADHs and FADH2s from other chains donate their electrons to oxygen
(final electron receptor)  move through ETC as donating  creates proton
gradient between mitochondrial matrix and intermembrane space 
protons in intermembrane will move down ATP synthase and release energy
as they move  energy used to phosphorylate ADP into ATP
- Enter:
o NADH
o FADH2
o O2
o ADP
- Exit:
o NAD+
o FAD
o H2O
o ATP

For every glucose molecule put into aerobic respiration = 36 ATP produced

Excess glucose, now what

- Make glycogen via glycogenesis


- Store in adipose tissue via lipogenesis

No glucose, now what?

- Liver undergoes glycogenolysis to turns glycogen into glucose


- gluconeogenesis = turns non carbs into glucose
o pyruvate
o lactate
o glycerol
o some amino acids

Gluconeogenesis = process of turning non carbs into glucose

Glycogen = long term energy of glucose

Glycogenesis = glucose turning into glycogen

Glycogenolysis = turning glycogen into glucose

Glycolysis = turning glucose into pyruvate

Glucagon = catabolic hormone that raises your blood sugar

9/18 Lecture

Anaerobic Respiration: incomplete glucose oxidation = occurs when O2 is lacking


- starts with glycolysis
- enter:
o 2 ATP
o 2 NADH
o 1 glucose
- Exit:
o 4 ATP
o 2 NAD+
o 2 pyruvate
- Glycolysis continues = build up of pyruvate and NADHs
- Pyruvate under goes fermatation  pyruvate turns into lactate  NADH is oxidized back
into NAD+  NAD+ can go back to being used as reactant in glycolysis
- Lactate then moved to liver where it can be converted into glucose via gluconeogenesis

Anaerobic respiration only results in two ATP

- Reasons for anaerobic respiration


o Cell might lack O2
o Non-functional mitochondria
o Cell lacks mitochondria (ex: red blood cells)

Cells can also use amino acids, glycerol, and fatty acids for energy = last source

Lipid Metabolism

- Tongue = lingual lipase


- Stomach = gastric lipase
- Pancreas = pancreatic lipase
- Lipids are broken down into fatty acids and glycerol by lipase
o Lipase = hydrophilic (don’t interact well with lipids)
- Bile salts = emulsify fats (made in liver and stored in the gallbladder)
- Colipase = loads the lipase onto the fats (made in the pancreas)
- Monoglycerides and fatty acids will simply diffuse across the apical membrane
o Made into triglycerides in the epithelial cell  triglycerides are sent to the golgi
apparatus where we add proteins and other lipids  form chylomicrons  leave
basal lateral membrane via exocytosis  chylomicrons are too big to enter
bloodstream through capillaries  enter lymphatic system though lacteals  once
in lymphatic system it goes into the bloodstream  chylomicrons are broken down
with lipoprotein lipase into fatty acids and glycerol  can be transported to adipose
tissue to be stored as triglycerides or to the liver to undergo metabolic processes

Lipids

- Excess fatty acids and glycerol can be moved to adipose tissue and liver and be turned into
triglycerides via lipogenesis
- Fatty acids + glycerol = triglyceride via lipogenesis
- Triglycerides undergo lipolysis (breakdown of triglycerides via hydrolysis reactions) when we
don’t have enough glucose
- Fatty acids converted into acetyl CoA through beta-oxidation  acyl-CoA enters krebs cycle
 results in 6 NADH, 2 FADH2, and 2 ATPs  NADH and FADH enter oxidative
phosphorylation and become ATP
- Glycerol from lipolysis is moved to liver  become glucose through gluconeogenesis 
glucose enters glycolysis and be converted into pyruvate  pyruvate can become acetyl-
CoA through pyruvate oxidation  NADH and FADH2 from krebs cycle go into oxidative
phosphorylation

Lipid metabolism produces more ATP, but also produces ketones which can result in ketoacidosis

Ketogenesis

- Excess acetyl CoA will enter ketogenesis and produce ketones and CO2 as a byproduct
o Ketones and CO2 cause blood to become more acidic
o Ketones can be used as energy source directly from the brain
o Ketones are good, but don’t want to much

Metabolic acidosis

- Headache
- Hyperkalemia = excess of potassium ions
- Low blood pressure
- Lower muscle tone and reflexes = confusion and increased drowsiness
- Kussmaul respirations (Compensatory hyperventilation)
- Muscle twitching
- Warm, flushed skin (vasodilation)
- Nausea, vomiting
- Causes: increase H+ production (DKA, hypermetabolism), decrease H+ elimination (renal
failure), decreased HCO3 production (dehydration, liver failure), increase HCO3 elimination
(diarrhea, fistulas)

Excess glucose

- Excess enters glycolysis  turned into pyruvate  pyruvate becomes acetyl-CoA via
pyruvate oxidation  acetyl-CoA can be converted into fatty acids  fatty acids form
triglycerides that will be stored in adipose tissue until needed  or acetyl CoA can be
converted into cholesterol  used to make steroid hormones or bile  steroid hormone
location is dependent on hormone  bile is made in the liver and stored in the gall bladder
- Excess glucose into lipids = lipogenesis

Protein Metabolism

- Last resort and only used in dire circumstances


- Proteases
o Pepsin = made in stomach = endopeptidase
o Trypsin = pancreatic protease = endopeptidase
o chymotrypsin = pancreatic protease = endopeptidase
o carboxypeptidase = final pancreatic protease = exopeptidase
o enterokinase = converts trypsinogen into trypsin  trypsin then converts
chymotripsinogen into chymotrypsin and procarboxypeptidase into
carboxypeptidase
o cytoplasmic peptidase = convert di/tri peptides into amino acids inside epithelial
cells  aa’s cross the apical membrane via co-transport with sodium  di/tri
peptides cross apical membrane via co-transport with hydrogen  aa’s can cross
basolateral via facilitated diffusion  di/tri peptides converted into aa’s via
cytoplasmic peptidases which can leave via facilitated diffusion
- aa’s in blood stream can become new proteins, be converted into fats, into acetyl CoA, or
into pyruvate
o if pyruvate  go through linking step/pyruvate oxidation and become acetyl CoA 
enter krebs  produce NADH and FADH2  undergo oxidative phosphorylation and
become ATP
o if acetyl CoA  skip linking step and go directly into krebs  NADH and FADH2 go
into oxidative phosphorylation and produce ATP
o a couple can become glucose via gluconeogenesis
o Excess aa’s can be eliminated by deaminated them (removing NH2 amine group) 
produces ammonia (NH3)  ammonia is toxic so it travels to liver to be changed 
liver converts the ammonia into urea  urea travels to the kidneys  kidneys
eliminate urea via urine

Absorptive state = fed state = when body is absorbing nutrients

- Increase: glucose oxidation (more glucose into the cell), glycogen synthesis (glycogenesis),
fat synthesis (lipogenesis), protein synthesis (proteogenesis)
- Insulin released in response to high amino acids and high glucose
o Peptide hormone released by beta cells in pancreas
- How would this affect the function of plasma, conc of glucose, fatty acids, and amino acids
o Causes decrease because theyre being actively used

Postabsorptive state = fasted state = no food intake

- Decrease: blood glucose


- Glucagon released from alpha cells in the pancreas and also a peptide hormone
o Causes increase in glycogenolysis, gluconeogenesis, and ketogenesis
- Why is it important that these functions occur during a fasted state?
o Provide substrates to make energy (ATP) to prevent hypoglycemia (low blood sugar)
- Occurs when amino acids levels are low and blood glucose is low

Lecture 9/21

Intercellular communication = how cells communicate with one another

Chemical messengers
- Functional classification = based on what they do
o Direct = this type of direct communication
o Paracrine (indirect)
o Neurotransmitters (indirect)
o Hormones (indirect)
o Neurohormones (indirect)
- Chemical classification = based on chemical property
o Lipophilic (hydrophobic) or lipophobic (hydrophilic)
o 4 classes of chemical messengers
 Amino acids
 Amines
 Peptides/proteins
 Steroids

Direct communication = Gap junctions

- Pass ions and small molecules from one cell to adjacent cell
- Bridge from cell to the other

Basics of indirect intercellular communication

- The secretory cell secretes the ligand (also known as the chemical messenger) which travels
through the interstitial fluid and/or blood to reach the target cell where the ligand must
bind to the receptor on/in the target cell which brings about a target cell response

Indirect communication: Paracrine

- Messenger = paracrine
- No specific target cell, but must be neighboring cell
- No specific secretory cell
- Message travels through interstitial fluid
- Secretory cells and target cells must be nearby
- Ex: Histamine, prostaglandins, cytokines, growth factors, clotting factors

Indirect communication: Neurotransmitters

- Messenger = neurotransmitters
- Released by neurons
- Target = close by cell = postsynaptic cell
- Secretory cell = presynaptic cells
- Only travels through interstitial cells
- Only targets nearby cells
- Ex: glutamate, acetylcholine, norepinephrine

Indirect Communication: Hormones

- Messenger = hormones
- Target cell = none specific
- Released from endocrine cells
- Travel through interstitial fluid then diffuses into blood
- Target far away cells
- Ex: thyroid hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone, gonadotropin releasing hormone,
insulin

Indirect communication: Neurohormones

- Messenger = neurohormones
- Released from neurosecretory cell
- No specific target cells
- Travel through interstitial fluid then blood
- Target far away cells
- Ex: vasopressin (ADH), epinephrine

Chemical classification of messengers

- Amino acids = neurotransmitters only


- Amine = paracrine, neurotransmitters, hormones
- Peptides/proteins = paracrines, neurotransmitters, hormones
- Steroids = hormones only

Chemical properties of messengers

- Amino acids = lipophobic


- Amines = lipophobic except thyroid hormone (lipophilic)
- Peptides/proteins = lipophobic
- Steroids = lipophilic

Synthesis and Release Characteristics

- Lipophilic ligands (steroid hormones and thyroid hormones)


o Synthesized on demand
o Immediate release from the secretory cell
 Not stored (fat loving = able to pass through bilayer easily)
 Will diffuse away from storage vesicle
- Lipophobic ligands (amino acids, peptides/proteins, and amines)
o Synthesis is independent of demand
o Stored in secretory vesicles of secretory cell until needed
o Released by exocytosis
o Release rate determined by exocytosis
 Cant easily pass through membrane so they can be stored

Example: Amine Synthesis

- All amines are derived from amino acids (tryptophan = melatonin)


- Amino acids  amines via enzyme-catalyzed reactions
- Other examples: histidine = from histamine and thyroid hormone = from tyrosine
Catecholamines synthesis (group of amines)

- All derived from tyrosine via series of enzyme catalyzed reactions


o Creates dopamine, norepinephrine (noradrenaline), epinephrine (adrenaline)
- Dopamine and norepinephrine = neurotransmitter
- Epinephrine = neurohormone

Peptide and Protein synthesis

- Formed by cleaving larger proteins


- Start as prepropeptide  propeptide  peptide  if peptide is hormone becomes
preprohormone  prohormone  hormone
- mRNA translated into prepropeptide  modified and cleaved into propeptide  propeptide
is sent to the golgi apparatus  golgi apparatus bundles it into secretory vesicles  more
amino acids are cleaved after secretory vesicles  becomes peptide and leaves cell via
exocytosis

Steroids (ex of how steroid hormones are synthesis)

- start with cholesterol  becomes steroid hormone via series of enzymatic catalyzed
reactions

Properties of chemical messengers using chemical classification

- amino acids = lipophobic = independent of demand = stored and released via exocytosis =
made from enzymatic catalyzed reactions = interstitial fluid = short half life
- amines = lipophobic* = independent of demand = stored and released via exocytosis = made
from enzymatic catalyzed reactions from amino acids = interstitial fluid only or IF and blood
= dissolved in plasma = short half life
- peptides/proteins = lipophobic = independent of demand = stored and released via
exocytosis = made from protein synthesis = IF only or IF and blood = dissolved in plasma =
short half life
- steroids = lipophilic = on demand = immediate release via simple diffusion = made from
enzymatic catalyzed reactions from cholesterol = IF and blood = bound to carrier protein =
long half life

Two types of transport

- diffusion through interstitial fluid


o secretory cell and target are nearby
o ligand is quickly degraded
o examples: paracrines, and NTs
- blood borne transport
o secretory cell and target are far away
o lipophobic (hydrophilic): dissolved in plasma
o lipophilic (hydrophobic): bound to carrier protein
o ex: hormones, neurohormones
Messenger Half-Life

- how long does it take for half of the messenger to disappear


- messengers dissolved in plasma have a short half-life compared to messengers bound to
carriers
- liver degrades the chemical messengers
- kidney secretes chemical messengers

Lecture 9/23

Properties of Receptors

- specificity
- binding is brief and reversible
- affinity = how strong the interaction between receptor and messenger is
- one messenger can bind many receptor types
- one target may have many types of receptors
- number of receptors per cell varies and is dynamic

Magnitude of Response

- Affinity for the messenger


o Increase the affinity = increase of likelihood receptor binds to the messenger =
increase response
- Number of receptors
o More receptors = larger response
o Plateau on graph represents receptor saturation
- Concentration of the messenger
o Increase of messengers = increase likelihood of receptor binding to response =
stronger response

Receptor Agonist and Antagonists

- Agonists = chemical which binds to the receptor


o Action mimics normal response
- Antagonist = competes with normal ligand or agonist for same binding site
o If the antagonist binds the ligand cannot bind = decrease cell response

Signal Transduction Pathways

Mechanisms: Signal Transduction

- Intracellular mediated response


o Receptor is located within the cell either in cytoplasm or nucleus
o Ligand is lipophilic
o Chemical classes = steroids (thyroid hormone)
o Target cell response = relatively slow
 Gene activation = some inactivation
- Membrane bound receptor mediated responses
o Within the membrane
o Ligand is lipophobic
o Chemical classes = amino acids, amines (except thyroid hormone), and peptide
proteins
o Target cell response = relatively fast
 Enzyme activation
 Changes membrane permeability

Intracellular mediated response

- Occur when the ligand is lipophilic


- Steroid hormone simply diffuses through membrane  binds to receptors in cytoplasm or
nucleus  binding forms the hormone receptor complex  hormone receptor complex
binds to DNA at the hormone response element  when bind it will either turn on or turn
off genes  genes turned on will make more proteins and genes turned off will stop making
proteins

Membrane bound receptor mediated responses

- Occurs when ligand is lipophobic


- Types:
o Ligand (chemically) gated
 Channel-linked
 G-protein linked
o Enzyme-linked
- When ligands binds to the receptor on target cell
o Permeability of the target to ions may be alters
o Enzymes may be activated

Types of Channels

- Leak = always open


- Gated = open or close in response to stimulus
o Voltage gated = change in response to membrane potential
o Chemically (ligand) gated = open/close in response to ligand binding to a receptor
o Mechanically gated = something physically has to open/close it
o Thermally gated = changes in temperatures open/closes the gates

Ligand gated channels = ligand must bind to the ligand gated channel

- Two types: fast and slow channels


o Fast channels = when receptor and channel are the same protein (ionotropic
channels)
o Slow channels = when the receptor and channel are different proteins
(metabotropic)

Channel-linked receptors
- Fast ligand gated
- Ligand binds to receptor and causes it to open  allows ions to move through  changes
electrical property of cell
- Can only open in response to ligand binding to it
- Ligand will just fall off to close it
- Ex: calcium channels

G protein-linked receptors

- Three subparts
o At rest a GDP is attached to the alpha subunit
o Ligand binds to the receptor  activates the G protein and GDP falls off  the GTP
comes on the alpha subunit  causes the alpha subunit (with GTP) to slide over 
will either bump an ion channel (may open or close it) or it will alter the enzyme
activity on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane
o Ligand falls off the receptor  GTP is hydrolyzed back into GDP  and the alpha
subunit slides back and re associates with the beta and gamma subunits  G
protein is inactivated
o All are SLOW ligand gated channels = open/close channels or alter enzyme activity
of the cell
o Receptor and channel are different proteins
o Two types of mechanisms:
 Direct coupling
 Second messenger

Direct coupling

- Activate G-protein  slides over  bumps into channel  causes channel to open or close
 change in electrical properties of the cell

Second Messenger System

- Triggered by first messenger (ligand) activates the G-protein which activates an amplifier
enzyme which activates the second messenger production which activates or inhibits
pathways
- Two types of G-proteins
o Gi = inhibitory amplifier enzyme = decrease cell response
o Gs = stimulatory amplifier enzyme = increase cell response

Amplifier enzymes = make second messenger

- Three types: adenylate cyclase, guanylate cyclase, and phospholipase C

Second messenger systems

- cAMP = adenylate cyclase


- cGMP = guanylate cyclase
o both cyclic nucleotides
- DAG
- IP3
o Both lipid derived made by phospholipase C
- Calcium = ion

cAMP

- Turn on
o Ligand binds to the receptor  activates G protein  alpha subunit with GTP slides
over into adenylate cyclase  converts ATP into cAMP  cAMP activates protein
kinase  phosphorylates a protein by taking a phosphate from an ATP and putting
it on a protein phosphorylated protein causes cell response
- Turn off
o Ligand falls off the receptor  hydrolyze GTP back to GDP causing re-association of
the alpha subunit  break down second messenger (cAMP) with an enzyme
(phosphodiesterase: PDE)  remove phosphate from the phosphorylated protein
with phosphatase

IP3/DAG

- Turn on
o Messenger binds to receptor and activated the G protein  amplifier enzyme
phospholipase C is active by G protein  phospholipase C converts PIP2 into DAG
and IP3  DAG stays in the membrane and activates protein kinase C  protein
kinase takes phosphate from ATP and phosphorylates a protein that causes a cell
response  IP3 travels into the smooth ER inside the cell and bind to the receptor
on smooth ER  causes receptor channel to open  calcium leaves smooth ER and
can either bind to calmodulin to form calcium calmodulin complex  activates a
protein kinase which causes cell response  OR calcium can have its own cell
response
- Turn off f
o Same as cAMP but degrading designated second messenger enzyme
 Also requires calcium re-uptake to put it back into the smooth ER

Signal Amplification

- A little does a lot


- One messenger can cause phosphorylation of lots of proteins

Enzyme-linked receptors

- Ex: insulin = glut4 transported inserted in plasma membrane of skeletal muscle


- Ligand binds to receptor  causes a conformational change  phosphorylates a tyrosine on
a protein  phosphorylated protein causes cell response
- Insulin receptor = tyrosine kinase

Long distance communication

- Endocrine system
o Uses hormones
o Travel through IF then blood
o Slower system than nervous system
 Can have longer effect because slower
- Nervous system
o Neurons and glial cells
o Neurons are used for short communication but long axons cause longer distance
o Uses neurotransmitter to communicate signals
 use voltage gated channels and ligand gated channels

Nervous Communication

- dendrites = coated with ligand gated channels


- soma = cell body
- axon = voltage gated channels
- axon terminal = released the neurotransmitter into the synapse or area between the pre
synaptic cell and post synaptic cell
- receptor found on post synaptic cell

**Table 5.6

- Nervous system
o Secretory cell = neuron
o Target cell = neuron, muscle or gland
o Messenger = neurotransmitter
o Pathway for communication = across synapse
o Basis of specificity = receptors on postsynaptic target cell
o Time to onset of effect = immediate
o Duration of effect = brief
- Endocrine system
o Secretory cell = endocrine cell
o Target cell = most cell types in the body
o Messenger = hormone
o Pathway of communication = via bloodstream
o Basis of specificity = receptors on target cells throughout body
o Time to onset of effect = delayed
o Duration of effect = long

Lecture 9/25

Classification of Hormones

- Steroid hormones
o Lipophilic
o Derived from cholesterol
o Ex: testosterone, progesterone, estrogen, hormones secreted by the adrenal cortex
- Peptide/protein hormones
o Lipophobic
o Ex: ADH, insulin, GH, and PRH
- Amine Hormones
o Derived from amino acids
o Lipophobic except for the thyroid hormone (TH)
o Ex: melatonin, thyroid hormones, and catecholamines

Focus on regulation of the synthesis and secretion of hormones

Hormones to know

- Hypothalamus
o DA = dopamine
o TRH = thyrotropin releasing hormone
o CRH = corticotropin releasing hormone
o GHIH = somatostain (SS)
o GHRH = growth hormone releasing hormone
o GnRH = Gonadotropin releasing hormone
- Anterior pituitary
o TSH = thyroid stimulating hormone
o ACTH = adrenocorticotropic hormone
o GH = growth hormone
o LH = luteinizing hormone
o TH = thyroid hormone
- Endocrine glands
o IGFs = insulin-like growth factors = formerly known as somatomedins
o PTH = parathyroid hormone
o Calcitonin
o Aldosterone
o Melatonin
o Epinephrine
o Insulin
o Glucagon
Posterior Pituitary
o Oxytocin
o ADH = antidiuretic hormone (vasopressin)

Control of Endocrine system

- Humoral control = receptor in body detects concentration of ions of metabolites in blood to


keep the balance
o Low calcium level in blood triggers parathyroid gland to secrete parathyroid
hormone to bring calcium back up
- Neural = a nerve cell synthesis and secretes the hormone
o
Ex: nerve cell in sympathetic nervous system stimulates the medulla of the adrenal
gland to secrete catecholamines
- Hormonal = another hormone causes the synthesis and secretion of the final hormone
o Ex: hypothalamus release hormone that triggers a cascade to finally release a final
hormone like TH, cortisol, or testosterone

Pituitary Gland

- Most of the hormonal control


- Size of lima bean
- Below the hypothalamus
o Connected to hypothalamus by the infundibulum stock
- Posterior Pituitary = Neurohypophysis = extension of the neural tissue
o Stores neural hormones
- Anterior Pituitary = Adenohypophysis = true endocrine gland of epithelial origin
o Synthesis and stores hormones

Pituitary Gland: Posterior

- Hormone is made and packaged in the cell body of neuron and stored in secretory vesicle
that is transported down the axon of the neuron  when the reach the axon terminal they
are stored in posterior pituitary until they’re needed The neural hormones are released
into the blood via exocytosis upon stimulation
o Lipophobic

Hypothalamus and Anterior Pituitary: Tropic Hormones

- Tropic hormone regulates hormone secretion by another endocrine gland


o Hypothalamus will release a releasing hormone  releasing hormone will travel to
the anterior pituitary and binds to excitatory receptor  excitatory receptor cause
release of a stimulating hormone from anterior pituitary  stimulating hormone
travels to final endocrine gland and binds to excitatory receptor on it  causes the
release of the final endocrine hormone  final endocrine hormone will travel to the
target tissue where it binds to excitatory receptors and causes a cell response
o RH = releasing hormone
o IH = inhibiting hormones
- Hypothalamus creates thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH)  TRH travels via the
hypothalamic pituitary portal system to the anterior pituitary  binds to excitatory
receptors on anterior pituitary  release of thyroid stimulating hormone  thyroid
stimulating hormone travels to the thyroid gland  binds to excitatory receptors on the
thyroid gland  causes a release of thyroid hormone (final hormone)  travels to target
tissue and bind to excitatory receptors  cell response
- Neurohormones are released into capillary bed via exocytosis  travel through blood to the
anterior pituitary  bind to the receptors on the endocrine cells in the anterior pituitary 
if those hormones are releasing hormones they will cause the anterior pituitary to release
stimulating hormones  if they are inhibiting hormones then the anterior pituitary to stop
production of the stimulating hormone
- Goal = allow tropic hormones synthesize and secretion by the hypothalamus to get to the
anterior pituitary
- Capillary bed = within the infundibulum

Feedback loops

- Hormones levels controlled by negative feedback loops

Atrophied = decrease in size = fewer cells = less binding to inhibitory cells = increase of hypothalamus
and anterior pituitary hormone

Adenoma

- An adenoma is a benign or non-cancerous tumor that forms on glands in the body


o Functioning adenoma = hypersecretion of hormone
o Non-functioning adenoma = hyposecretion of hormone
- Hyposecretion = increase in ACTH and CRH
- Hypersecretion = decrease in ACTH and CRH

Primary endocrine disorder = problem with the final endocrine gland

Secondary endocrine disorder = problem with the hypothalamus or anterior pituitary

Summary of Abnormal secretion of hormones

- Hyposecretion
o Causes: nonfunctioning adenoma, gland atrophy (most common cause)
- Hypersecretion:
o Causes: functioning adenoma and cancerous tumors
- Abnormal tissue responsiveness
o Down regulation of receptors
o Receptor and signal transduction abnormalities
 E.g hormone cannot bind to the receptor
- Primary endocrine disorders
o Can be primary hypo- or hypersecretion
o Abnormality in endocrine organ that secretes the hormone
- Secondary endocrine disorders
o Can be secondary hypo or hypersecretion
o Abnormality in tropic hormone
 Hypothalamic tropic hormone
Anterior pituitary tropic hormone

Lecture 9/28

The posterior pituitary

- Will only store hormones


o ADH (vasopressin) and oxytocin
- ADH = regulates water and osmolarity balance
o Primarily produced by paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus
o Target the kidneys
- Oxytocin =
o Produced primarily by the supraoptic nuclei of the hypothalamus
o Targets the uterus during childbirth and allows for greater contraction and also
targets the breasts during breast feeding
 Increases milk let down (mother-childing bonding)
- ADH and oxytocin are functionally classified as neurohormones and chemically classified as
peptides

ADH = decrease urination

- Diuretics cause you to urinate therefore an antidiuretic will cause a decrease in urination
and so the function of ADH is a decrease in urination
- What stimulates ADH release?
o Pain, low BP, stress
o Nicotine, morphine
- What inhibits ADH?
o Alcohol
- If ADH is hyposecreted = increase urine production
o Diabetes
 Symptoms = increase urination, thirst, dehydration, and headaches
 Treatments = drinking water and synthetic ADH (Desmopressin)

Anterior Pituitary hormones

Growth hormone

- Hypothalamus releases a growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH)  GHRH travels to


the anterior pituitary and releases the growth hormone (GH)  GH will travel to liver and
release somatomedin (IGF-1) and travel throughout the body
- Hypothalamus will also release Growth Hormone Inhibiting Hormone (GHIH) in order to
control how much hormone is actually released
o All hormones are classified as peptides = lipophobic and hydrophilic

GH feedback loop

- Once IGF-1 is released it will target the bone and muscle cells to grow
- After GH is released it will travel to the adipose tissue and cause the lipolysis in adipose cells
into fatty acids and glycerol  glycerol will travel to liver and undergo gluconeogenesis into
glucose  fatty acid and glucose will travel to growing tissues (bone and muscle cells) GH
also travels to nongrowing tissues to decrease glucose utilization  allows bone and muscle
cells to use more glucose
- To shut down system GHIH will travel to anterior pituitary  stop producing GH  IGF-1
will travel to hypothalamus to cause GHIH to be released
Hyposecretion of GH: Dwarfism

- Upregulation = increase in receptors = increase in binding = increase in hormone


- Other disorders
o Acromegaly = hypersecretion of GH after puberty that results in soft tissue
enlargement
o Gigantism = GH hypersecretion before puberty that causes bone growth

Thyroid Hormone **LIPOPHILIC AMINE

- Hypothalamus releases thyrotropin releasing hormone  TRH travels to the anterior


pituitary and binds to excitatory receptors  anterior pituitary releases thyroid stimulating
hormone  TSH travels to thyroid gland the final endocrine gland and binds to excitatory
receptors  secretion of thyroid hormone  TH will be released in circulation and taken to
target tissues

Thyroid gland

- Secretes 3 types of hormones


o T3 = triiodothyronine
o T4 = tetraiodothyronine (thyroxine)
 T3/T4 = thyroid hormone TH
o Calcitonin

Synthesis and secretion of TH

- Two cell types


o Follicular cells = make up the wall of the follicle and surround colloid
o C cells (parafollicular cells) secrete calcitonin
- The mechanism:
o Follicular cells produce and secrete thyroglobin TG (precursor to TH) and bring
iodide into the colloid (iodide is brought into the follicular cells via A.T. from the
blood)
o Once follicular cells produce and secrete thyroglobin into the colloid  iodide is
added to the thyroglobin  1 iodide = monoiodityrosine (MIT) and two iodides =
diiodotyrosine (DIT)  DIT + MIT = T3 and DIT + DIT = T4  thyroglobin-thyroid
hormone complex  TSH from anterior pituitary binds to TSH receptor on cell wall
of the follicular cells  activates G protein  GDP and GTP comes on  alpha
subunit with GTP on it slides and bumps adenylate cyclase  adenylate cyclase
converts ATP to cAMP  cAMP activates protein kinase A  protein kinase A
phosphorylates a protein  phosphorylated protein causes phagocytosis of
thyroglobin-thyroid hormone complex  creates a phagosome  phagosome is
fused with lysosome with digestive enzymes to form phagolysosome  digestive
enzymes inside lysosome degrade thyroglobin-thyroid into T3/T4 hormones 
thyroglobin is recycled and put into colloid  T3/T4 diffuse out of follicular cells
(lipophilic) and travels in blood to target tissue  bind to receptors inside the cell
- Targets most tissues except the brain and gonads
- Functions of TH
o Increase basal metabolic rate (increased rate of O2 consumption)
 Increase heat production
 Increase O2 consumption = increase rate of cellular respiration
o Increase rate of Na/K pump
 Increase rate ATP is hydrolyzed
 Aids in cellular uptake in nutrients
o Promote increased numbers of mitochondria in cells
o Increase of enzymes involved in oxidative phosphorylation
o Development of NS
o Necessary for growth and development in children
o Glycogenolysis/gluconeogenesis
 Increase glucose
o Lipolysis
 Makes more fatty acids and glycerol
 Fatty acids will be turned into Acetyl-CoA via beta oxidation
o Proteolysis
 Higher amino acid level which undergo gluconeogenesis and increase the
glucose concentration
o No level increase of glucose or acetyl-CoA because its being used as quickly as it is
being made

Hypothyroidism

- Low TH
- Low BMR
- Low heartrate
- Higher weight
- Lower heat production
- Cannot tolerate cold
- Treatment: synthetic thyroid hormone
- Lack TH from birth = cretinism
o Results in dwarfs and mentally underdeveloped (reversible)

Hyperthyroidism

- High TH
- High BMR
- High heart rate
- Decrease weight
- Higher heat production
- Cannot tolerate heat
- No treatment

Lecture 9/30
Adrenal glands = on top of kidneys

- Adrenal cortex = outer most layer


o Zona glomerulose = outermost layer
o Zona fasciculata = middle layer
o Zona reticularis = inner most layer
- Adrenal medulla = innermost layer

Hormones of the adrenal cortex: Adrenocorticoids = steroid hormones

- Zona glomerulosa
o Secretes mineralcorticoids (class of adrenocorticoids)
 Aldosterone
 Targets kidneys
 Reabsorbs sodium and potassium excretions
- Zona fasciculata
o Secretes glucocorticoids (adrenocorticoids)
 Primarily cortisol = stress hormone
- Zona reticularis
o Sex hormones
 primarily androgens

steroid hormones = lipophilic = membrane carrier in blood and require an intracellular protein

Control of aldosterone

- not controlled by hypothalamus hypophysiotropic and pituitary gland hormones


- controlled by humoral control
o Na low and K high cause synthesis and secretion of aldosterone to restore normal
levels

Cortisol = chemically classified as a steroid

- Corticotropic releasing hormone (CRH) is released from the hypothalamus  travels to


anterior pituitary and binds to excitatory receptors  anterior pituitary releases
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)  travels to adrenal cortex and binds to excitatory
receptors  synthesis and secretion of cortisol  cortisol travels to tissue to cause a cell
response
- Function of cortisol = free fuel
o Maintain normal levels of enzymes to breakdown fats, proteins, and glycogen
o Required for GH secretion (in synergism with TH)
o Gluconeogenesis = higher blood glucose levels
o Proteolysis in muscle = free amino acids
 Amino acids will travel to liver and undergo gluconeogenesis
o Lipolysis in adipose tissue = fatty acids and glycerol
 Glycerol will travel to the liver to undergo gluconeogenesis
 Fatty acids undergo beta-oxidation to make acetyl-CoA = increase in
gluconeogenesis
o Suppresses immune response (IR) = targets thymus
 Easy to get sick when stressed
- Circadian rhythm = increase of cortisol in the day and decrease at night

Effects of abnormal glucocorticoid secretion: hypersecretion

- If increase CRH secretion  increase ACTH secretion  increase cortisol secretion (levels)
- If increase ACTH  increase cortisol
- Increase cortisol levels = cushings disease
o Results in increase in gluconeogenesis  increase glucose levels  results in
hyperglycemia  glucosuria (glucose in urine)  results in adrenal diabetes
o Increase glucose levels = increase of adipose tissue in belly, face, and back
 Cortisol is relocating adipose tissue to most needed areas
o Increase proteolysis = decrease muscle mass, weakness and fatigue, and poor
wound healing

Thymus = immune response

- Secretes thymosin
o Regulates T cell function
 T-lymphocytes = type of WBC
o Cortisol suppresses the thymus

Adrenal Medulla

- Secretory cells = chromaffin cells (modified neurons)


o Secretes: 80% epinephrine, 20% norepinephrine, <1% dopamine
 Amines = catecholamines
- Under neural control = released from neurons
- Epinephrine causes increase in gluconeogenesis, glycogenolysis, lipolysis, and ketogenesis
o Increase fuel levels to make ATP

Pineal gland

- Glandular tissue in brain


- Secretes melatonin
o May be involved in circadian rhythm

Functions of Calcium in the body = very important

- Extracellular matrix
o 99% of body calcium
o Calcified matrix of bone
- Extracellular fluid
o 0.1%
o “Cement” for tight junctions; role in myocardial and smooth muscle contraction;
neurotransmitter release at synapses; role in excitability of neurons; cofactor in
coagulation cascade
- Intracellular
o 0.9%
o Signal in second messenger pathways; role in muscle contraction

Three hormones control Ca balance

- Calcitonin
o Secreted from C cells (parafollicular cells) in thyroid
o Peptide
- parathyroid hormone (PTH)
o secreted from parathyroid gland embedded in thyroid
o peptide
- calcitriol
o not relevant

osteoclasts

- break down bone = increase Ca levels in plasma

Functions of calcitonin = decrease plasma calcium levels

- Targets bone:
o Calcitonin inhibits osteoclasts which will then inhibits breakdown of bone and
decrease plasma calcium levels
- Targets kidneys:
o Increase calcium excretion which decreases plasma calcium levels
- Targets small intestines:
o Decrease calcium absorption by the small intestines = decrease plasma calcium
levels
- caLcitonin = Lowers calcium
o uses cAMP pathway

Functions of PTH = increase plasma calcium levels

- targets bone:
o activates osteoclasts = increase bone breakdown and increases plasma calcium
levels
- targets kidneys:
o reabsorb calcium = increases plasma calcium levels
- targets small intestines:
o increases calcium absorption by small intestines = increase plasma calcium levels
- paRathyRoid hormone = Raises calcium levels
o uses cAMP pathway

Gonads
- male = testes
o testosterone
o androstenedione
- female = ovaries
o estradiol/estrogen
o progesterone
o placenta of pregnant female
 estrogens and progesterone

Testosterone

- steroid
- hypothalamus secretes GnRH  binds to excitatory receptors on anterior pituitary to
secrete luteinizing hormone (LH)  travels to testes to create the secretion of testosterone
from the Leydig cells
- functions
o development of secondary sex characteristics
o protein synthesis
o promotes spermatogenesis in sertoli cells
o increases sexual drive in brain
o development of accessory reproductive organ

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