thesis
The median eminence : an electron microscopic study with special reference to gonadotropin release in the rat
- Publication date
- 10 May 1978
- Publisher
- Adaptation of an organism to changes in the external and internal environment
is in vertebrates brought about by two more or less separate integrative
systems: the nervous system and the endocrine system. The nervous
system is primarily equipped for rapid and short lived responses, the
endocrine system for slower but longer lasting ones.
The cells of nervous system and endocrine system have many features in
common but they differ, apart from rapidity and duration of the effects
exerted, in the way they achieve "privacy" (Wurtman, 1970) in their intercellular
conununication. In the nervous system "privacy" is attained
primarily by anatomical means whereas chemical messengers, operating over
a long distance, are particularly used in the endocrine system.
In the nervous system, neurons are the cells adapted for reception,
integration and rapid transmission of information. Transmission occurs
along dendrites and axons, which are elongated parts of the neurons themselves,
and from one cell to another at morphologically identifiable
sites of contact, the synapses. Transmission is mediated by a limited number
of substances, neurotransmitters, which are released extremely close
to receptors of the affected cells.