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Signaling by the neuroendocrine system Neuronal signals Electrical signals Neurotransmitters ~a micrometer Endocrine signals Hormones secreted into the bloodstream, A meter or so Both neurotransmitters and hormones interact with specific receptors. Two general mechanisms of hormone action Peptide and amine hormones Fast Plasma membrane receptor Effectors: intracellular signaling Gene expression Steroid and thyroid hormones Slower Enter the cells Nuclear receptors: transcription factor Gene expression Insulin A small protein, 5.8 kDa Important in glucose metabolism Mature insulin A larger precursor preproinsulin Remove a 23 aa signal sequence Formation of three disulfide bonds Proinsulin Remove the C peptide Mature insulin A and B chains. Proteolytic processing of the pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) precursor a long polypeptide that undergoes cleavage a series of specific proteases ACTH β- and γ-lipotropin α-, β-, and γ-MSH CLIP β-endorphin Metenkephalin Catecholamine hormones Water soluble Epinephrine (adrenaline) Norepinephrine (noradrenalin) Neurotransmitters: neurons Hormones: adrenal glands Eicosanoid hormones Paracrine Prostaglandins Contracting smooth muscle Pain, inflammation Antiinfflamatory drugs Steroid hormones Endocrine tissues, adrenal cortex Cytochrome P-450 Glucocorticoids Carbohydrate Mineralocorticoids Electrolytes Testosterone Estrogen Sexual development Sexual behavior Reproductive functions The major endocrine glands Hypothalamus Coordination center Regulatory hormones Pituitary gland via blood vessels and neurons Posterior pituitary Neurons from hypothalamus Anterior pituitary Hypothalamic hormones in blood The major endocrine systems and their target tissues Neuroendocrine origins of hormone signals Neuroendocrine origins of hormone signals The hypothalamus-pituitary system. Anterior pituitary Releasing factors into a blood vessel . The anterior pituitary releases the appropriate hormone. Posterior pituitary Hormones synthesized in neurons arising in the hypothalamus. Two hormones of the posterior pituitary gland Oxytocin acts on the smooth muscle of the uterus and mammary gland, causing uterine contractions during labor and promoting milk release during lactation. Vasopressin (also called antidiuretic hormone) increases water reabsorption in the kidney and promotes the constriction of blood vessels, thereby increasing blood pressure. Cascade of hormone release In each endocrine tissue, a stimulus from the level above is received, amplified, and transduced into the release of the next hormone in the cascade. The cascade is sensitive to regulation at several levels through feedback inhibition by the ultimate hormone. Specialized metabolic functions of mammalian tissues Metabolic pathways for glucose 6-phosphate in the liver Carbohydrates, proteins, fats Broken down Fats in epithelial cells triacylglycerol (TAG) Blood capillaries to the liver Kupffer cells: immune Hepatocytes: transform dietary nutrients into fuels and precursors Metabolism of amino acids in the liver Metabolism of fatty acids in the liver The liver is a distribution center. Adipocytes of white adipose tissue Adipocytes of white and brown adipose tissue BAT: mitochondria are prominent. Thermogenic WAT: larger and contain a single huge lipid droplet. Store and supply fatty acids Distribution of brown adipose tissue in a newborn infant At birth, human infants have brown fat to protect the major blood vessels and the internal organs. This brown fat recedes over time, so that an adult has no major reserves of brown adipose. Insulin regulation in the liver: The well-fed state calorie-rich meal glucose, fatty acids, and amino acids entering liver. Insulin - glucose uptake by tissues. Some glucose - exported to brain, adipose, muscle tissue. In liver, excess glucose oxidized to acetyl-CoA fatty acids – TAG in VLDLs to adipose and muscle tissue. very-low-density lipoprotein The endocrine system of the pancreas Exocrine cells: digestive enzymes in the form of zymogens Clusters of endocrine cells, the islets of Langerhans. The islets contain α, β, and γ cells, each cell type secreting a specific peptide hormone. Glucose regulation of insulin secretion by pancreatic β cells blood glucose level up glucose uptake glucose 6-phosphase [ATP] up closing K+ channels Depolarizing voltage-gated Ca2+ channels open Ca2+ flow [Ca2+] up insulin release by exocytosis ATP-gated K+ channels in β cells (a) The octameric structure: four identical Kir6.2 subunits and four SUR1 (sulfonylurea receptor) subunits (b) The structure of the Kir6.2 portion of the channel. Three K+ ions (green) are shown in the region of the selectivity filter. Sulfonyluria drugs Type 2 diabetes mellitus Binds to SUR1 Closing the channels, stimulating insulin release The fasting state: the glucogenic liver After some hours without a meal Glucagon from pancreas glycogen – glucose gluconeogenesis amino acids from proteins in muscle. glycerol from TAGs in adipose tissue. fatty acids - ketone bodies – other tissues, the brain. Fuel metabolism in the liver during prolonged fasting or in uncontrolled diabetes mellitus After depletion of stored carbohydrates, proteins become an important source of glucose (1 to 4). Fatty acids from adipose tissue - ketone bodies the brain (5 to 8). Plasma concentrations of fatty acids, glucose, and ketone bodies during the first week of starvation [glucose] down [ketone bodies] up an energy source during a long fast. Fatty acids cannot serve as a fuel for the brain; they do not cross the blood-brain barrier. Diabetes 6% of the US population Type 1 diabetes Autoimmune destruction of pancreatic b cells Insulin deficiency Insulin dependent Early in life, quick and severe symptoms Type 2 diabetes Slow, mild, typically in older, obese individuals Insulin is produced Insulin-response system is broken Insulin-resistant Diabetes vs. obesity Obesity and the regulation of body mass Body mass index (BMI) 30% obese 35% overweight Obesity vs. diabetes Set-point model for maintaining constant mass adipose tissue up - leptin inhibits feeding and fat synthesis, stimulates oxidation of fatty acids. adipose tissue down - a lowered leptin production - a greater food intake and less fatty acid oxidation. Obesity caused by defective leptin production ob/ob mice, no leptin ate more food less active, 67 g ob/ob mice Injected with leptin 35 g Hypothalamic regulation of food intake and energy expenditure Adipose – leptin Leptin receptor in arcuate nucleus of hypothalamus Appetite - Fuel intake - down Energy spending – up Heat Sympathetic nervous system Blood pressure, heart rate, thermogenesis Hormones that control eating Leptin - adipose tissue Insulin – pancreas Anorexigenic neurosecretory cells - α-MSH - eat less, burn fuel Orexigenic neurosecretory cells to inhibit the release of NPY – eat more The gastric hormone ghrelin -NPY release These two opposing signals are balanced. The JAK-STAT mechanism of leptin signal transduction in the hypothalamus Leptin binding - dimerization of the leptin receptor JAK - Tyr phosphorylation of Rc. STAT – p-Rc – dimerization – nucleus – transcription - feeding behavior and energy expenditure. A possible mechanism for cross-talk between receptors for insulin and leptin Insulin receptor - Tyr kinase Leptin receptor – Phos by JAK Both phosphorylate insulin receptor substrate-2 (IRS-2) PI-3K - inhibition of food intake. Ghrelin Ghrelin Peptide hormone from stomach Appetite stimulant between meals Injection of ghrelin – intense hunger Insulin Insulin levels rise immediately after each meal, in response to the increase in blood glucose concentration.