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Hypothalamus Hypothalamus • “Older” part of the brain (Primitive) – Maintenance of homeostasis • Reception of external and internal signals • Incorporation of signals to generate appropriate responses – Endocrine – Autonomic – Behavioral • Reception of feedback – Hormones Anatomy of hypothalamus • Landmarks – Anterior (front) • Optic chiasm (crossing of optic nerve fibers) – Posterior (dorsal/back) • Mamillary body – Superior (cranial) • Third ventricle – Inferior • Pituitary stalk/infundiblum • Neural organization of hypothalamus – Clusters of neurons • Nucleus/nuclei – Different section of hypothalamus contains different nuclei Median eminence • The center of the tuber cinereum (floor of the third ventricle) – Blood vessels – Nerve endings • Functional link between hypothalamus and pituitary gland – Site where the pituitary portal vessels arise • Extensive network of “arterialized” venus capillaries • Microcirculation between hypothalamus and anterior pituitary • Three zones – Ependymal layer • Cells with microvilli • Tanycytes – Forms barrier between CSF and blood – Prevention of diffusion of hypothalamic factors – Internal zone • Axons of hypothalamic neurons (supraoptic and paraventricular) – Extended to the posterior pituitary • Three zones – External zone • Peptinergic neurons – Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) – Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH/CRF) – Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH/LHRH) • Neurons that release monoamines – Serotonin and dopamine • Portal vessels • Release of hypothalamic peptides – Depolarization of neural cells – Supporting elements • Non-neural cells – Coordinated regulation by interaction of neurons • Hypothalamic • CNS Types of neurosecretory system • Magnocellular neurons – Neural cells located within hypothalamus • Paraventricular hypothalamic nuclei • Supraoptic nuclei – Axon extend through median eminence and enter the posterior pituitary gland – Hormones produced by the neural cells in hypothalamus and transported to the posterior pituitary gland to be released • Oxytocin • Vasopressin • Parvicellular hypophyseotropic neurons – Nuerons within Paraventricular hypothalamic nuclei and arcuate nuclei – Axons terminate in median eminence • Portal plexus – Factors released in portal circulation • Triggers secretion of anterior pituitary hormones • Hypothalamic projection neurons – Communication between neurons • Hypothalamic neurons – Paraventricular hypothalamus – Lateral hypothalamic area – Arcuate nuclei • Target neurons – Preganglionic neurons in spinal cord • Use of hormones as neural signals Regulation of hypothalamic hormone secretion • Role of neurons within the brain – Intrinsic and extrinsic cues • Sensory neurons • Neurotransmitters – Excitatory – Inhibitory – Neurotransmitters • Monoamines – Dopamine, Nor, Epi, Serotonin, Histamine, and acetulcholine • Amino acids – Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glycine, and glutamate Regulation of hypothalamic hormone secretion • Role of neurons within the brain – Neurotransmitters • Excitation or inhibition depend on the type of receptor present on the peptinergic neurons • Feedback system – Production of hormones by target tissue • Release of TSH from hypothalamus results in release of TRH from pituitary gland and subsequently production of T3 and T4 by thyroid gland – Hypothalamus and pituitary gland • Target tissue to steroid and thyroid hormones • Types of feedback – Long-loop • From target organ to hypothalamus, pituitary, or higher brain – Short-loop • Between hypothalamus and pituitary • Retrograde flow of pituitary hormones to hypothalamus – Autofeedback (autoinhibition) • Within the hypothalamus • Result of feedback – Inhibition of pituitary hormone release • Prevent action of hypothalamic hormones – Inhibitor production • Alteration of cell population • Alteration of cellular sensitivity to hypothalamic hormones – GnRH receptor concentrations increase in response to estradiol – TRH receptor concentrations decrease in response to thyroxin Regulation of secretory rhythm/pattern • Biological clock – Circadian rhythm • Diurnal activity • Light-dark cycle (Day/night) – Changes in external environment – Regulated by supraoptic nuclei • Pituitary hormones – Episotic/pulsatile secretion • Critical for normal function Action of hypothalamic hormones • Anterior pituitary gland – Heterogeneous population of cells • Several secretory cells • Hypothalamic hormones – Elicit/inhibit action potential • Ca-dependent – Induce/inhibit cAMP production • Activity of adenylcyclase