Kreier Felix, Swaab Dick F
Department Pediatrics, OLVG Hospitals, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department Neuropsychiatric Disorders, Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience, an Institute of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Handb Clin Neurol. 2021;179:7-43. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-819975-6.00031-5.
The central brain region of interest for neuroendocrinology is the hypothalamus, a name coined by Wilhelm His in 1893. Neuroendocrinology is the discipline that studies hormone production by neurons, the sensitivity of neurons for hormones, as well as the dynamic, bidirectional interactions between neurons and endocrine glands. These interactions do not only occur through hormones, but are also partly accomplished by the autonomic nervous system that is regulated by the hypothalamus and that innervates the endocrine glands. A special characteristic of the hypothalamus is that it contains neuroendocrine neurons projecting either to the neurohypophysis or to the portal vessels of the anterior lobe of the pituitary in the median eminence, where they release their neuropeptides or other neuroactive compounds into the bloodstream, which subsequently act as neurohormones. In the 1970s it was found that vasopressin and oxytocin not only are released as hormones in the circulation but that their neurons project to other neurons within and outside the hypothalamus and function as neurotransmitters or neuromodulators that regulate central functions, including the autonomic innervation of all our body organs. Recently magnocellular oxytocin neurons were shown to send not only an axon to the neurohypophysis, but also axon collaterals of the same neuroendocrine neuron to a multitude of brain areas. In this way, the hypothalamus acts as a central integrator for endocrine, autonomic, and higher brain functions. The history of neuroendocrinology is described in this chapter from the descriptions in De humani corporis fabrica by Vesalius (1537) to the present, with a timeline of the scientists and their findings.
神经内分泌学关注的中枢脑区是下丘脑,这个名称由威廉·希斯于1893年提出。神经内分泌学是一门研究神经元产生激素、神经元对激素的敏感性,以及神经元与内分泌腺之间动态、双向相互作用的学科。这些相互作用不仅通过激素发生,部分还由受下丘脑调节并支配内分泌腺的自主神经系统来完成。下丘脑的一个特殊之处在于,它包含神经内分泌神经元,这些神经元投射至神经垂体或正中隆起处垂体前叶的门静脉血管,在那里它们将神经肽或其他神经活性化合物释放到血液中,随后这些物质作为神经激素发挥作用。20世纪70年代发现,血管加压素和催产素不仅作为激素在循环中释放,它们的神经元还投射至下丘脑内外的其他神经元,并作为调节中枢功能(包括对我们所有身体器官的自主神经支配)的神经递质或神经调节剂发挥作用。最近发现,大细胞催产素神经元不仅向神经垂体发出轴突,同一神经内分泌神经元的轴突侧支还延伸至多个脑区。通过这种方式,下丘脑成为内分泌、自主神经和高级脑功能的中央整合器。本章将从维萨里(1537年)在《人体的构造》中的描述开始,按时间顺序介绍科学家及其发现,阐述神经内分泌学的历史。