Homeostasis
process by which an organism constantly maintains the internal conditions necessary for life
maintains the stability of the human body’s internal environment in response to changes in external conditions
regulatory mechanisms
communication between organs essential
the nervous and endocrine systems provide the majority of the communication:
nervous influx through the nerves
hormones carried by the blood
always 3 interdependent elements in a regulatory mechanism
receptor (senses variation)
input goes via the afferent pathway
regulation center (integrates variation)
output sent along the efferent pathway
effector (response organ)
study of regulatory mechanism
difficult: one mechanism can affect others, mechanisms can be redundant (allows preservation of life)
physiological range
existence of a variation range for the parameter that is acceptable for the organism
0.8 - 1.26 g/L (4.5 - 7 mM)
levels of regulation
organs/tissue: control in organs and organic fluids (blood) for all elements needed for living, an important role of the hypothalamus (hunger, thirst, body temperature)
cell: control of enzymes activity/transport (inflow/backflow)
types of controllers
nervous cells: sensory cells capable of detecting variations and responding by the production of action potentials
endocrine cells: humoral answer is enough to control the change of a variable (insulin vs. glucagon)
Nervous system
Peripheral somatic nervous system
cell body in the central nervous system
single neuron from CNS to effector organs
NT = Acetylcholine (stimulatory)
effector organ skeletal muscle
Peripheral autonomic nervous system
two neuron chain from CNS to effector organs
sympathetic: ganglion with Ach preganglionic & Norepinephrine postganglionic
or adrenal medulla (Ach preganglionic and epinephrine/norepinephrine in blood vessels)
parasympathetic: lightly myelinated preganglionic axon —> ganglion (ACh) —>unmyelinated postganglionic axon (ACh)
stimulatory or inhibitory depending on NT and receptor
Vagus nerves
longest cranial nerve
contains motor and sensory fibers and has the widest distribution in the body
Endocrine glands
The hypothalamus very important nervous integrator center with an endocrine function
pituitary gland is under the control of the hypothalamus
controls other endocrine glands (thyroid, adrenal glands, mammary glands, gonads)
hormones secreted: thyroid, parathyroids, adrenal glands, ovary, testis, thymus, and pancreas (insulin & glucagon)
but also from the digestive tract, adipose tissue, stomach
local hormone
locally secreted by cells, acts on nearby cells
paracrine or autocrine mode
Circulating hormone
secreted in the bloodstream by endocrine glands (insulin)
endocrine mode
Route & dispersion in the circulatory system
hormone released into venous circulation—>goes through heart, lungs & then to target organ
—>at the level of target reduced quantity
Steroid and thyroid hormones
lipophilic
can pass membrane by passive diffusion
binds to receptors in cytoplasm
translocation in the nucleus as active TF
activates transcription and translation of certain gene
new protein—>induces answer in the target tissue
long process
non steroid hormones
the ligand binds the surface receptor
intracellular signaling
signal transduction (via second messanger)
cellular response
changes in gene expression
fast and late response
gut-brain axis
enteric nervous system (receptor) first organ sensing glucose, stimulated by bacteria
nervous and endocrine signals (integration centers)
autonomic nervous system
energy homeostasis (liver, muscle, pancreas, adipose tissue —>effectors)
Microbiota
1-3% of body weight
high diversity in bacteria species in the mouth, intestine, skin, urogenital tract
less in stomach: unfriendly acidic environment
biggest families: firmicutes, bacteroidetes
varies between populations & individuals
but functional redundancy —> central metabolic pathways (carbohydrate and AA metabolism)
Development of human microbiota
sterile gastrointestinal tract during pregnancy
upon birth, the gut is exposed to microbes from the mother’s reproductive tract & environment (different if cesarean or vaginal delivery)
upon first 2 years often variations in the composition of gut microbiota
then solid food —> gut microbiota more diverse and stable
in old age, gut microbiota alters drastically, with less diversity
factors for variability in the human gut microbiota
geographical location, region-specific diet
host genetics
exposure to antibiotics, feeding type
use of prebiotics/probiotics
age/health
mode of delivery, hospital environment
Pre-biotics
food for bacteria
only metabolized by the gut bacteria, not the human host
increase bacterial growth
Pro-biotics
live bacteria
active bacterial cultures
renew microbiota after long antibiotic therapy
Syn-biotics
combination of pro and prebiotics
main functions of bacteria in the gut
breaking down food compounds
resistance to pathogens (protection)
metabolism of therapeutics
biosynthesis of vitamins and amino acids
development & training of the immune system
modification of the nervous system
promotion of angiogenesis
promotion fat storage
modulation of bone-mass density
protection against epithelial injury
Nutrients production
Dissolution: broken down in the stomach
Absorption: of simple carbohydrates, most fats, and proteins in small intestine
Fermentation: of fiber-rich carbohydrates in the colon, transformed into beneficial compounds by bacteria (short-chain fatty acids, branched-chain fatty acids, non-starch polysaccharides, resistant starch, carbohydrates)
side products such as formate, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen gas are used by other species in cross-feeding
importance of diversity
the more diverse, the healthier
dietary fibers are a source of complex carbohydrates
microbiota in aging
mucus reduction
dysbiosis (loose good bacteria)
toxins (like LPS)
barrier dysfunction / decreased gut motility
—>barrier or enterocytes more fragile (bacteria should not be in contact with blood to avoid immune response)
—>if crossing inflammation that can become systemic —>chronic diseases
altered intestinal microbiota can lead to chronic inflammation & metabolic dysfunction
Bacterial growth
exponential growth in prandial phase —>help to digest and signal to brain satiation
postprandial phase: small plateau, static
preprandial phase: decline, signal hunger to the host
intestinal satiety pathways
digestion products and energy substrates (ATP, lactate, butyrate) can signal to vagal afferents
bioactive molecules (LPS, 5HT, indole) and mimetics of peptide hormones (ClpB) can stimulate satiety hormones (peptide tyrosine tyrosine PYY, glucagon-like peptide GLP1)
—>activate anorexigenic pathways (signal enough nutrients in the body)
actors of glycemia regulation
digestive tract
enteric nervous system
endocrine pancreas
liver
skeletal muscles and adipose tissue
stomach: Ghrelin (hunger hormone), Leptin
small intestine: duodenum (CCK)
jejunum (APO AIV)
ileum (GLP1, PYY)
pancreas: Glucagon, insulin
> 500 million neurons (sensitives (chemo, mechano, thermo), interneurons, efferent)
independent, separate from the autonomic nervous system since it has its own independent reflex activity
capable of carrying reflexes and acting as an integrating center in the absence of CNS input
—>second brain
has vagal efferences and afferences
communicates with CNS via vagal pathway, parasympathetic (ACh), and splanchnic pathway sympathetic (NE)
—>acts autonomously & influences behavior by sending messages up the vagus nerve to the brain
Implicated hormones
Glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide GIP
GLP1
—> Hormones from intestine stimulating the pancreas
—>increased insulin secretion, biosynthesis
—>increased ß-cell proliferation & cell survival
Pancreas functions
exocrine function: secretion of pancreatic enzymes through the Wirsung canal in the duodenum
endocrine function: secretion of pancreatic hormones in the blood
Portal system
circulatory system linking the intestine, liver & pancreas
nutrients absorbed into the blood from the intestine go through the liver before entering the central circulation
Islets of Langerhans
for endocrine function
many capillaries to bring oxygen
many veins to release hormones into the circulation
2% of pancreas mass, 1-15 mio islets
each composed of 2000-4000 cells
hormones: ß cells (insulin), α cells (glucagon), δ cells (somatostatin), PP cells (pancreatic polypeptide)
The main actions of insulin
hormone of the fed state, storage hormone, hypoglycemic hormone
—>glucose uptake in insulin-sensitive organs (stimulation of transport via GLUT4 in muscles and adipose tissue)
—>glucose storage in the liver and muscles (glycogen)
—>inhibition of lipolysis (fat) and neoglycolysis (liver)
—>action on CNS: insulin receptor implicated in the control of appetite—>increased production of satiety factors
Insulin secretion ß-cells
glucose sensor GLUT2 (high Km) takes uo glucose converted quickly into G6P by glucokinase (high Km)
metabolized in mitochondria to ATP
inhibits K+ATP channel
depolarisation of the membrane
open voltage-gated calcium channels
fusion of insulin-containing vesicles with membrane (SNARE implicated, similar exocytosis as for neurotransmitter)
translocation & docking —> priming —> fusion (Ca2+ dependent)
Biphasic insulin secretion
phase: fast increase & peak in insulin secretion—> readily releasable pool RRP (<5%) next to membrane for fast fusion
phase: reserve pool deeper in the cell close to cytoskeleton—>less strong but long-lasting secretion
potentisation of insulin secretion
due to hormonal input (incretin)—>increased cAMP—>Ca2+ release
neural input (ACh)—>second messenger due to GPCR mechanism DAG & IP3 release Ca2+ from ER
but glucose is always needed from induction of secretion, potentisation afterwards
Regulation of insulin secretion by the GI tract
important communication between intestine and endocrine pancreas
oral administration of glucose associated with increased plasma insulin level compared to intravenous administration
Incretin responsible for 50-70% of the total insulin secretion
Gluco-incretins
GLP1 & GIP
GIP = glucose-dependant insulinotropic polypeptide
GLP1 = Glucagon-like peptide 1
secreted by intestine
short half-life: degradation by DPP-4 (Dipeptidyl peptidase 4) by cleavage of 2 AA in Nter
Synthesis GLP1
same precursor (proglucagon) as glucagon (produced in the pancreas)
different post-translational modifications in gut/brain lead to GLP1
2 active forms: amidated GLP1 or glycine-extended GLP1
GLP1 secretion
stimulus = nutrients
receptor sense glucose (uptake via SGLT1 together with sodium)
membrane depolarization
opening Ca2+ channels
release GLP-1 in portal vein
GLP-1 transport
via intestinal capillaries to portal circulation (75% lost due to degradation by DPP-IV)
over the liver into systemic circulation and into the pancreas
only 15% reach the pancreas for potentisation, the rest is destroyed by DPP-IV
halflife 2-3 min
GLP-1 receptor
GLP-1R
GPCR (7 transmembrane domains)
coupled via stimulative regulative G protein linked to adenylate cyclase
on ß cells
action GLP-1
stimulates insulin secretion even at fasting glucose levels in ß-cells (increases cAMP—>PKA activation—>stimulates release of Ca2+ from ER)
inhibitory effect on glucagon secretion in α-cells
inhibition of gastric and pancreatic acid secretion & deceleration of gastric emptying
action on the nervous system: injection in portal veil activates hepatic afferent fibers and increases the activity of pancreatic efferent nerves
action GLP-1 on ß-cells
increase: proinsulin gene expression & translation, ß-cell proliferation & neogenesis
decrease: ß-cell apoptosis
incretin
1 gene, 1 mRNA, 1 protein
produced in enterocytes (intestine)
GIPR
GPCR
coupled via stimulative G protein linked to adenylate cyclase
on pancreatic ß cells
GIP action
stimulation insulin secretion even at fasting glucose level (also release of Ca2+ and potentization of the signal)
no inhibitory effect on glucagon secretion (no effect on α-cells main difference to GLP-1)
Ghrelin
hunger hormone, mechanical secretion depending on the size of the stomach
empty: ghrelin secretion —>appetite increases (low CCK, GLP-1& PYY)
full: no ghrelin, no appetite (CCK, GLP-1 & YPP secreted)
summary regulation glycemia
begins as soon as blood glucose level increases after a meal (digestion-microbiota)
importance of glucose sensor system (nutrient sensor)
importance of endocrine and nervous communications
essential role of the digestive tract (appetite, hormones)
GLP-1 & GIP are the 2 major incretin hormones (primary action on the pancreas)
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