Hormones, The Tireless Choreographers of Life (Zoom)

Hormones, The Tireless Choreographers of Life (Zoom)

Fall (4-8 hours) | Available (Membership Required)

Online Lebanon, NH 03766 United States
Online Meeting
10/21/2024-11/11/2024
10:30 AM-12:30 PM EDT on Mon
$50.00

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Hormones, The Tireless Choreographers of Life (Zoom)

Fall (4-8 hours) | Available (Membership Required)

The human body has 30 trillion cells whose activities are coordinated in cycles of almost mind-boggling complexity. Hormones are among the most key and ancient ways that the body coordinates life.  Like the shouts a quarterback gives moments before a play is run, a miniscule amount of hormone is enough to launch complex choreographies of activities in a wide variety of cells. Hormones control the most crucial of life functions that vary over a day (such as digestion and water balance), month (fertility), or over the course of a lifetime itself (e.g., growth of different parts of the body from conception onward, this way and that, with typical outcomes if errors occur).

Through lecture and with some discussion, this course will cover the discovery of key hormones, where in the body they are produced, the roles for which each are known, and their regulation. Besides metabolism, growth and fertility, we will learn that hormones have roles in regulating our salt and water balances, blood pressure, memory, mood and immune defenses. We will see that hormones usually need to act together with other hormones to be effective (as with the various sex hormones), and  as in the story of Goldilocks, their amounts and duration need to be just right; examples from medicine will show the effects of too much or too little, too soon or too late. Hormones are so important to life that hormones seen throughout the animal and plant  kingdoms have human analogues.

 

  • There are no required books for this course. 
North, William
William North

Dr. William G. North is now a resident of Bryan, Texas. He retired as Professor Emeritus of Molecular and Systems Biology at the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth where he taught courses in endocrinology, digestive physiology, and bioethics for over 45 years. As a member of the Norris Cotton Cancer Center, he researched new cancer treatments. He is president of Woomera Therapeutics, a small biotechnology company.