trace the movement of a hormone from the organ that produces it to its target binding site (organ or tissue). how does this hormone get from the organ/gland that produces it to its binding site



Answer :

Once hormones find a target cell, they bind with specific protein receptors inside or on the surface of the cell and specifically change the cell's activities.

The endocrine organs, which produce chemicals—the hormone—into the extracellular fluid, are responsible for sending these messages. Throughout the body, hormones are largely delivered via the circulation, where they connect to receptors on target cells to produce a specific reaction. Because it has the hormone's receptors, a target cell reacts to the hormone. In other words, a cell is a target cell for a hormone if it has functional receptors for that hormone, and a cell cannot be directly impacted by a hormone if it does not have a functioning receptor. Blood, which is pumped throughout the circulatory system, carries hormones throughout the body. Hormones have the power to control activity in tissues and organs that are not located near the glands that produce them.

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