BIO210Y5 Chapter Notes - Chapter 16: Red Blood Cell, Calcitriol, Tachycardia

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18 Feb 2016
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16. 13 hormones interact to produce coordinated physiological responses. Because cells have more than one type of receptor, they respond to multiple hormones simultaneously. When a cell receives instructions from two hormones at the same time, there are four possible outcomes. The two hormones may have antagonistic (opposing) effects, as in the case of. The net result depends on the balance between the two hormones. In general, when antagonistic hormones are present, the observed effects are weaker than those produced by either hormone acting unopposed. The two hormones may have additive effects, so that the net result is greater than the effect that each would produce acting alone. In some cases, the net result is greater than the sum of the hormones" individual effects. An example is the enhancement of the glucose-sparing action of gh in the presence of glucocorticoids. One hormone can have a permissive effect on another.

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