- Joined
- May 31, 2006
- Messages
- 73
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
- Pre-Dental
ryan85 said:I've recently been seeing some questions on practice exams about which of the following is a protein hormone or steroid hormone. Are these some thing that are likely to appear on the real test? If so, how can I remember these?
prez_al said:I thought flat peg was only for the hormones made in the anterior hypothalamus.
Banana Berry said:I believe only sex hormones and hormones which are produced by the adrenal cortex are steroid hormones.
Thyroid hormones (Thyroxine and Triiodothyronine) are protein hormones.
lintydent said:Peptide hormones don't directly affect their target organ (thus indirectly); they act via secondary messengers.
vs. Steriod hormones which enter target cells directly and bind to specific receptors.
So the PEG are direct hormones and the FLAT are the tropic/indirect hormones.
I believe this is correct.
thehipster said:Isn't epinephrine a peptide hormone? It's a catecholamine. Also, is TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) a peptide?
amsie said:cause they come from iodination(is that even a word?) of tyrosine,no?
PS to whomever wrote it above: flatpeg is for hormones from ant PITUITARY...not hypothalamus!
thehipster said:Isn't epinephrine a peptide hormone? It's a catecholamine. Also, is TSH (thyroid stimulating hormone) a peptide?
Uracil said:TSH cannot be classified as a peptide or steroid hormone because it's a tropic hormone (stimulate other glands to release its hormones - those released hormones then could be classified as peptide or steroid hormones)
For example, TSH --> T4 & T3 (These thyroid hormones are amino acid derived from Tyrosine, so they are peptide hormones).
Also, epinephrine and norepinephrine are peptide hormones (amino acid derived from tyrosine too and phenylalanine).
prez_al said:I thought flat peg was only for the hormones made in the anterior hypothalamus.
grapeflavorsoda said:i think you are confused between hormone classification based on its functionality and composition.
2 major types of hormones classified by its functionality are direct and tropic hormone.
3 major types of hormones classified by its composition are amine-derived, peptide, and steroid.
the two classification system has no relevance. So knowing a hormone being amine-derived does not help distinguishing whether it is direct or tropic. Converse of this example is also true.
so i dont understand how can u tell something is tropic hormone solely based on the fact that TSH is amine-derived hormone. TSH is obviously tropic hormone but there is no correlation relating functionality and composition whatsoever.
oops my bad, well it has been 7 months since i wrote the DAT lol, I can't believe I even remembered "anterior". Sorry for the confusion.grapeflavorsoda said:yeap. flat peg is a mnemonic for anterior pituitary hormones(not hypothalamus)
"flat" are for the tropic hormones and "peg" is for direct hormones.
memorize them?
There must be an easier way!!!! 