CBSE · NCERT · Class 11 Biology · Chapter 19

NCERT Solutions: Class 11 Biology Chapter 19 - Chemical Coordination and Integration

8 textbook Q&A8 verifiedFree Content

Chapter-wise NCERT intext questions and exercise answers for Chemical Coordination and Integration, grounded in the official textbook.

Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT textbook; answers were grounded against the chapter's content during generation. Items needing review are marked.
Sections in this chapter
Exercises 8
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1Exercises8 questions
Q.1Define the following: (a) Exocrine gland (b) Endocrine gland (c) Hormonev
Solution

Exocrine glands include salivary and digestive glands. Endocrine glands include pituitary, thyroid, adrenal and others. Hormones travel to target tissues and regulate metabolism, growth, development and physiological activities.

Answer:

(a) Exocrine glands have ducts and pour secretions onto body surfaces or into cavities. (b) Endocrine glands are ductless glands that release hormones into blood. (c) Hormones are non-nutrient chemicals produced in trace amounts that act as intercellular messengers.

Q.3List the hormones secreted by the following: (a) Hypothalamus (b) Pituitary (c) Thyroid (d) Parathyroid (e) Adrenal (f) Pancreas (g) Testis (h) Ovary (i) Thymus (j) Atrium (k) Kidney (l) G-I Tractv
Solution

The posterior pituitary stores and releases oxytocin and vasopressin made by hypothalamus. Adrenal medulla secretes adrenaline and noradrenaline, while adrenal cortex secretes cortisol, aldosterone and small amounts of androgenic steroids. The endocrine pancreas has alpha cells secreting glucagon and beta cells secreting insulin.

Answer:

Hypothalamus: releasing and inhibiting hormones. Pituitary: GH, PRL, TSH, ACTH, LH, FSH, MSH, oxytocin and vasopressin release. Thyroid: T3, T4, TCT. Parathyroid: PTH. Adrenal: catecholamines, glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids and small androgens. Pancreas: insulin and glucagon. Testis: androgens. Ovary: estrogens and progesterone. Thymus: thymosins. Atrium: ANF. Kidney: erythropoietin. G-I tract: gastrin, secretin, CCK and GIP.

Q.4Fill in the blanks: Hormones Target gland (a) Hypothalamic hormones __________________ (b) Thyrotrophin (TSH) __________________ (c) Corticotrophin (ACTH) __________________ (d) Gonadotrophins (LH, FSH) __________________ (e) Melanotrophin (MSH) __________________v
Solution

Hypothalamic releasing/inhibiting hormones regulate pituitary hormones. TSH acts on thyroid, ACTH on adrenal cortex, LH/FSH on gonads, and MSH on melanocytes to regulate pigmentation.

Answer:

(a) Pituitary gland. (b) Thyroid gland. (c) Adrenal cortex. (d) Gonads: testes and ovaries. (e) Melanocytes.

Q.5Write short notes on the functions of the following hormones: (a) Parathyroid hormone (PTH) (b) Thyroid hormones (c) Thymosins (d) Androgens (e) Estrogens (f) Insulin and Glucagonv
Solution

(a) PTH increases blood Ca2+ by bone resorption, renal Ca2+ reabsorption and intestinal absorption. (b) Thyroid hormones regulate BMR, metabolism of carbohydrates/proteins/fats, RBC formation and water-electrolyte balance. (c) Thymosins help T-lymphocyte differentiation and antibody production. (d) Androgens regulate male accessory sex organs, secondary characters, spermatogenesis and libido. (e) Estrogens regulate female accessory organs, secondary sex characters, ovarian follicle development and mammary gland development. (f) Insulin lowers blood glucose by uptake/utilisation and glycogenesis; glucagon raises blood glucose by glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis.

Answer:

These hormones regulate calcium balance, metabolism, immunity, male and female reproductive traits, and blood glucose homeostasis.

Q.6Give example(s) of: (a) Hyperglycemic hormone and hypoglycemic hormone (b) Hypercalcemic hormone (c) Gonadotrophic hormones (d) Progestational hormone (e) Blood pressure lowering hormone (f) Androgens and estrogensv
Solution

Glucagon increases blood glucose, while insulin decreases it. PTH increases blood calcium. LH and FSH stimulate gonadal activity. Progesterone supports pregnancy. ANF causes vasodilation and lowers blood pressure. Testosterone is a major androgen and estradiol is a major estrogen.

Answer:

(a) Glucagon and insulin respectively. (b) Parathyroid hormone. (c) LH and FSH. (d) Progesterone. (e) Atrial natriuretic factor. (f) Testosterone and estradiol/estrogen.

Q.7Which hormonal deficiency is responsible for the following: (a) Diabetes mellitus (b) Goitre (c) Cretinismv
Solution

Diabetes mellitus is associated with prolonged hyperglycemia due to insulin deficiency/resistance. Goitre commonly results from iodine deficiency causing reduced thyroid hormone synthesis and thyroid enlargement. Cretinism results from hypothyroidism during pregnancy/early development, affecting growth and neural maturation.

Answer:

(a) Insulin deficiency or ineffective insulin action. (b) Thyroid hormone deficiency due to iodine deficiency. (c) Thyroid hormone deficiency during development.

Q.8Briefly mention the mechanism of action of FSH.v
Solution

FSH is a protein/glycoprotein hormone, so it does not enter target cells. It binds membrane-bound receptors, forming a hormone-receptor complex that generates second messengers such as cyclic AMP. These regulate cellular metabolism and gene activity needed for ovarian follicle growth in females and spermatogenesis support in males.

Answer:

FSH acts by binding to specific membrane receptors on gonadal target cells and triggering intracellular second-messenger responses.

Q.9Match the following: Column I Column II (a) T4(i) Hypothalamus (b) PTH (ii) Thyroid (c) GnRH (iii) Pituitary (d) LH (iv) Parathyroidv
Solution

T4 is thyroxine from thyroid. PTH is parathyroid hormone. GnRH is secreted by hypothalamus. LH is secreted by anterior pituitary.

Answer:

(a)-(ii), (b)-(iv), (c)-(i), (d)-(iii).