autocrine cell
prods substance that binds to specific receptor on own cell surface/receptors inside cell
local mediator
paracrine cell
prods substance that binds specific receptor on nearby target cell, e.g. NMJ
local mediator
endocrine cell
prods substance transported in blood, bind to specific receptors on distant target cells
sys to circulate hormones
endocrine glands
collection glands that secr hormones directly into circulatory sys to carry to distant target
cell types in islet of langerhans
production of insulin
beta cells synth pro-hormone proinsulin -> active insulin by removal water soluble polypep
half life 5-8mins
what does insulin bind to
specific tyrosine kinase mem receptor
how do beta cells cause prod insulin
neg feedback mech
further control of insulin
where is gluc uptake independent of insulin
overview how insulin cause effects
insulin in the liver
GLUT2 receptors can work either way
1. fasted = hepatocytes make gluc + transport out -> blood
2. fed = gluc -> hepatocyte + insulin stims hexokinase gluc -> gluc-6-p for low intracellular conc gluc
GLUT2 always present in cell mems
clinical signs insulin deficiency
glucose in CNS
metab almost 100% reliant on gluc = steady transport in + can’t incr/decr rate
gluc level in CSF direct proportional to blood sugar
* excess incr osmolarity CSF => water out neurons
* too little = neurons starve
cells not sensitive to insulin
functions of insulin
==> incr stores glycogen, fat + prot
glucagon
half life 4-6 mins
what stims release glucagon
effects of glucagon
catabolic
somatostatin effects
diabetes mellitus clinical signs
can get a combo of type I + II
type I vs type II diabetes mellitus
1 = due inadequate insulin secr (more common dogs)
2 = due abnormal target cell responsiveness (more common cats)
why does diabetes cause PU/PD
incr gluc in blood => freely filtered into nephron + renal threshold for reabsorp exceeded => glucosuria => incr urine
AND ECF vol decr + plasma osmolarity incr => thirst centre in hypothal stimmed
why does diabetes cause ketoacidosis
‘fasted state’ => adipose tiss broken down => FAs in blood => liver uses beta-ox to break down but not all acetyl CoA can enter citric acid cycle => excess forms ketone bods, e.g. acetone => large amounts cause illness
topographical anatomy pituitary gland