1.1 Endocrine, part 1: Key Terms, 1.1 Endocrine, Lecture Questions, Practice Quiz Lesson 1
Eicosanoids are:
--Biologically active lipids, --derived from arachidonic acid (fatty acid), --secreted by most cell membranes.
What are the functions of the endocrine system?
--Regulation of cellular metabolism and energy balance, --Growth and development, --Development and influence of behavior and emotions, --Maintenance of water, electrolyte, and nutrient balance, --Reproduction, --Immune response
Endocrine glands
--are ductless glands. --are the organs of the endocrine system. --secrete hormones directly into the bloodstream. --help maintain homeostasis.
The half-life of a hormone is:
--the time necessary to reduce the hormone concentration in the blood to half of what had been secreted.
Generally, there are two main factors that determine the levels of a hormone in the blood. Explain what those factors are and provide examples of how they might increase or decrease a hormone's level.
1. HORMONE SYNTHESIS -- is directly related to plasma hormone levels, and 2. HORMONE ELIMINATION -- (by liver, kidneys, and target cell uptake) is inversely related to plasma hormone levels.
Which hormones are synthesized from cholesterol? A. Steroids B. Modified amino acids C. Peptides D. Glycoproteins E. All of the above
A, Steroids
Which of the following is true of epinephrine? A. It is a tyrosine amine hormone B. A trytophan amine hormone C. A proline amine hormone D. A serien amine hormone
A. It is a tyrosine amine hormone
Which is the correct order of events for hormones activating Gs proteins? A. activation of G protein, binding of GTP, activation of adenylate cyclase, conversion of ATP to cAMP B. activation of G protein, binding of GTP, activation of phospholipase C, activation of DAG and IP3 C. activation of a G protein, tyrosine kinase receptor, phosphorylation of intracellular proteins
A. activation of G protein, binding of GTP, activation of adenylate cyclase, conversion of ATP to cAMP
The symphathetic nervous system directly stimulates which of the following amine hormones? A. Epinephrine from the adrenal medulla B. Thyroid hormones C. Insulin D. Aldosterone
A. epinephrine from the adrenal medulla
What is the mechanism of action of lipid-soluble hormones?
Activation of genes, which increases protein synthesis in the cell
After a lipid-soluble hormone is bound to its intracellular receptor, what does the hormone complex do?
Acts as a transcription factor and binds to DNA, activating a gene
Which of the following is a mechanism of stimulating hormone release? A. Humoral regulation B. Hormonal regulation C. Neural regulation D. All of the above
All of the above
______ hormones are made from an amino acid by chemical modification, or made by joining amino acids to form a peptide (very small protein).
Amino acid-based
________signals are similar to hormones in many ways, but act only on the very cells that release them!
Autocrine
Which of the following chemical messengers is NOT derived from lipids? A. Prostaglandins B. Insulin C. Cortisol D. Aldosterone E. Estrogens
B. Insulin
Which of the following is correctly matched? A. Steroid hormones bind to an intracellular receptor. Thyroid hormones bind to a plasma membrane receptor. B. Steroid hormones bind to a cytoplasmic receptor. Thyroid hormones bind to a nuclear receptor. C. Steroid hormones bind to a nuclear receptor. Thyroid hormones bind to a cytoplasmic receptor. D. Steroid hormones bind to a plasma membrane receptor. Thyroid hormones bind to an intracellular receptor
B. Steroid hormones bind to a cytoplasmic receptor. Thyroid hormones bind to a nuclear receptor.
Why do steroid hormones have a longer half-life than other hormones?
Because they are bound to protein carriers
Eicosanoids do NOT include __________. A. Paracrines B. Leukotrienes C. Hydrocortisones D. Prostaglandins
C. Hydrocortisones
Which of the folowing general chemical categories is NOT represented by a group of hormones? A. Modified amino acids (amines) B. Polypeptides and proteins C. Nucleic acids D. Steroids
C. Nucleic acids
Which of the following adrenergic receptors increase cAMP levels? A. α1 receptors B. α2 receptors C. β receptors
C. β receptors
Steroids hormones are derivatives of _____________. .
Cholesterol
Which of the following hormones has intracellular receptors? A. Epinephrine B. Cortisol C. Insulin
Cortisol
Which of the following is NOT a change that may be caused by a hormonal stimulus? A. A change in membrane potential B. The stimulation of a genetic event resulting in protein synthesis C. An increase in enzymatic activity D. Direct control of the nervous system
Direct control of the nervous system
The thyroid hormone, thyroxin, is formed: A. from cholesterol B. from changes to carbohydrates D. from other hormones E. From changes to an amino acid
E. From changes to an amino acid
Which are some characteristic of the endocrine system?
EFFECTS: causes metabolic activity changes in target cells RESPONSE TIME: slow reaction time (seconds to hours) DURATION OF RESPONSE: long-lasting (minutes to weeks) RECOVERY: slow (hours to weeks) COMMUNICATION: hormones in the bloodstream
________ are biologically active lipids which act in an autocrine or paracrine manner. They are made from essential fatty acids and influence inflammation, ion transport, sleep and other activities.
Eicosanoids
_______ _______secrete chemical messengers that travel in the bloodstream.
Endocrine glands
Which of the following is NOT a category of endocrine gland stimulus? A. Enzyme B. Humoral C. Neural D. Hormonal
Enzyme
Direct gene activation involves a second messenger (TRUE/FALSE)
FALSE
Which of the following is NOT a type of hormone interaction? A. Permissiveness B. Synergism C. Antagonism D. Feedback
Feedback
Cells that respond to peptide hormones usually do so through a sequence of biochemical reactions involving receptor and kinase activation. In order for cells to respond, it is necessary for first and second messengers to communicate. This is possible because ________. a. peptide hormones are converted by cell membranes enzymes into second messengers b. hormones alter cellular operations through direct stimulation of a gene c. the hormone receptor complex moves into the cytoplasm as a unit d. G protein acts as the link between first and second messengers
G protein acts as the link between first and second messengers.
Growth factor hormones, such as insulin, bind to which type of receptor?
G proteins
If you had to summarize the role of the endocrine system in one word, what would it be?
Homeostasis
Chemical substances secreted by cells into the extracellular fluids and that regulate the metabolic functions of other cell in the body are called:
Hormones
What BEST describes the process of up-regulation?
Increase the number of surface receptors
Which of the following hormones are controlled by a humoral stimuli? A. Triiodothyronine B. Insulin C. Epinephrine D. Norepinephrine E. Cortisol
Insulin
Which of the following hormones are controlled by humoral stimuli? A. Triiodothyronine B. Insulin C. Epinephrine D. Norepinephrine E. Cortisol
Insulin
What happens to the protein calmodulin when hormones bind to it?
It activates enzymes
The hormones and neurotransmitters released by the endocrine and nervous systems are chemical substances referred to as _________.
Ligands
Endo-
Means "in or within."
Para-
Means "near or beside."
Exo-
Means "out of, outside, away from."
Auto-
Means "self."
-crine
Means "to secrete."
-philic
Means loving/liking/preferring/having an affinity for something.
Compared to the nervous system, the endocrine system has:
More widespread and lasting effects
Hormone secretion is primarily regulated by ___________ feedback mechanisms.
Negative
__________ tend to be localized and immediate (microseconds to seconds); _________ tend to be widespread, slow (minutes to hours) to be implemented and slow (minutes to hours) to deactivate.
Neural controls; hormonal controls
Chemical signaling that affects neighboring cells is called:
Paracrine
________signals are similar to hormones in many ways, but act only on neighboring cells, not on distant targets.
Paracrine
When a chemical messenger helps initiate an inflammatory response by causing cellular changes in neighboring cells, it is demonstrating ___________ signaling.
Paracrine (para- refers to near or beside)
Lipo-
Pertaining to fat or fatty substance.
What intracellular substance degrades cAMP, thus inactivating the response to a hormone?
Phosphodiesterase
Which of the following does NOT influence the response of the target cell? A. Number of receptors for the hormone B. Concentration of hormone in the blood C. Rate of blood flow D. Affinity for binding between hormone and receptor
Rate of blood flow
Hydro-
Relating to water
Virtually all of the protein or amino acid-based hormones exert their effects through intracellular ________.
Second messengers
Which of the following is NOT a change typically produced by a hormonal stimulus? A. activates or deactivates enzymes B. stimulates production of an action potential C. alters plasma membrane permeability D. induces secretory activity
Stimulates production of an action potential
Which of the following occurs in situations where more than one hormone produces the same effects at the target cell and their combined effects are amplified? A. Summation B. Permissiveness C. Synergism D. Antagonism
Synergism
All adenohypophyseal hormones, except growth hormone (GH), affect their target cells via a cyclic AMP (cAMP) second messenger (TRUE/FALSE).
TRUE
All peptide hormone synthesis requires gene activation that produces mRNA (TRUE/FALSE)
TRUE
Both "turn on" factors (hormonal, humoral, and neural stimuli) and "turn off" factors (feedback inhibition and others) may be modulated by the activity of the nervous system (TRUE/FALSE)
TRUE
Neurotransmitters are a special class of paracrines (TRUE/FALSE)
TRUE
Cells that respond to a particular hormone are called:
Target cells
What property prevents the hormones of cell-surface receptors from entering the cell?
The molecules are water-soluble and cannot penetrate the lipid-soluble interior of the plasma membrane.
Hormones must bind to receptors on target cells in order to affect changes. Where can these receptors be located? (select all that apply) A. The plasma membrane B. They cytoplasm C. The nucleus D. The endoplasmic reticulum E. The Golgi Body
The plasma membrane The cytoplasm The nucleus
The ability of a specific tissue or organ to respond to the presence of a hormone is dependent on ________.
The presence of the appropriate receptors on the cells of the target tissue or organ.
Peptide hormones must bind to a plasma membrane receptor because:
They are polar
Most peptide hormones are easily transported in the blood plasma because:
They are water-soluble
A newly developed pesticide has been observed to bind to an intracellular hormone receptor. If ingested, residue from this pesticide could disrupte the levels of: A. melatonin B. thyroid hormone C. growth hormone D. insulin
Thyroid hormone
Which hormone's receptor is always bound to DNA, even when the receptor is empty? A. Insulin B. Cortisol C. Thyroid hormone
Thyroid hormone
Eicosanoids are a primary type of local hormone (true/false)
True
Which of the choices below is NOT a factor required for target cell activation by hormone receptor interaction? A. Blood levels of hormone B. Type of hormone C. Number of receptors for the hormone D. Strength of the bond between the receptor and the hormone.
Type of hormone
In circumstances where the body requires prolonged or increased levels of a hormone, the DNA of a target cell will specify the synthesis of more receptors on the surface of the cells of the target organ. This is known as ___________.
Up-regulation
What type of hormones bind to receptors located on the cell membrane?
Water-soluble hormones
If the signal for an organ to release a hormone is _____, the signal is hormonal.
a releasing hormone.
What type of response is initiated by steroid and thyroid hormones?
altered activity of genes
Amino acid-based hormones generally bind _____, but _______ is an important exception.
at the cells surface; thyroid hormone
When eicosanoids bring about cellular changes within the cell from which they were formed, the process is called _________ stimulation.
autocrine
Lipid-soluble hormones readily diffuse through capillary walls, whereas water-soluble hormones must:
be secreted through exocytosis, an active transport mechanism.
Modified amino acids that act as hormones are referred to as ________ amines.
biogenic amines
Steroid hormones are lipids, derived from:
cholesterol
Steroids, one of the two major hormone classes, are made from ______
cholesterol
Which second messenger causes the release of calcium from the endoplasmic reticulum? A. tyrosine kinase B. DAG C. cAMP dD IP3
d. IP3
Steroid hormones exert their action by _______.
entering the nucleus of a cell and initiating or altering the expression of a gene.
Damage to the liver might impair enzymatic degradation of some hormones. The levels of such hormones in the blood would therefore be expected to:
increase:
Lipophilic hormones bind to ___________ receptors of target cells.
intracellular
The receptors for steroids and thyroid hormones are ________.
intracellular
Thyroid hormone is somewhat unique in that:
it is a biogenic amine that is lipid-soluble
Concerning the half-life of hormones, lipid soluble hormones have a (longer/shorter) half-life?
longer
What amine hormone helps coordinate body activities with the light-dark cycle?
melatonin
Generally, the shorter the half-life of a hormone the _________ (more, less) frequently it must be replaced.
more
Most hormones are made of chains of amino acids and are therefore ____________.
proteins
In order for a cell to responde to a hormone, the cell must have the appropriate ________.
receptor
______ enter the cell and interact directly with DNA and nuclear factors to bring about changes in gene expression.
steroid hormones
The most common second-messenger mechanism of hormone action operates by:
synthesizing more than one hormone at a time
The binding of a hormone and a carrier protein is _______ (temporary, permanent); a very ______ (large, small) fraction of such a hormone in the blood is bound to a carrier at any one point in time.
temporary; large
Circulating hormones are released into ______ by an endocrine gland, and must travel to reach their (often distant) target
the blood
If the signal for an organ to release a hormone is _______, the signal is humoral.
the level of a chemical in the blood
If the signal for an organ to release a hormone is ______, the signal is neural
transmitted by the nervous system
Protein hormones are _________ soluble
water