Hormones Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Hormones stocks.

Hormones Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Jul 1 TEVA Update: Market Chatter: Teva Pharmaceuticals Faces FTC Probe on Patent Listings
Jul 1 TEVA Correction: Top Midday Stories: Boeing to Acquire Spirit AeroSystems; Robinhood Acquires Pluto; FTC Probes Teva; BlackRock Acquires Preqin; SCOTUS Grants Trump Some Immunity
Jul 1 NBIX FDA sets target action dates for Neurocrine drug applications
Jul 1 TEVA Teva focus of FTC investigation over inhaler patents
Jun 30 NVO Surprise! Novo Nordisk's Wegovy Just Achieved Another Milestone. Here's What You Need to Know.
Jun 29 NVO The Top Country With Most Scientists per Capita in the World
Jun 29 NVO If These 3 Words Are True, Altimmune's Weight Loss Candidate Could Beat Novo Nordisk's Wegovy
Jun 28 NBIX How Medicare drug price negotiations could hit pharma stocks
Jun 28 TEVA New AJOVY® (fremanezumab) Migraine Prevention Data Challenges Treatment Pauses
Jun 28 NVO Pharma Stock Roundup: FDA's CRL to MRK & ABBV, Phase III Study Failures for NVO, AZN
Jun 27 NVO Novo Nordisk (NVO) Rises Higher Than Market: Key Facts
Jun 27 NVO Novo Nordisk Buys 2seventy's Hemophilia A Program, Divestiture Supports Exclusive Focus On Abecma
Jun 27 NVO 2seventy bio completes $40m haemophilia A program deal with Novo Nordisk
Jun 27 NVO Novo Nordisk To Restrict Initial Wegovy Sales In China Amid High Demand
Jun 27 NVO European Equities Close Mostly Lower Thursday; Bank of England Warns of 'Sharp Correction' Risk
Jun 27 NVO Top Midday Stories: Walgreens Shares Tumble on Lower Guidance, Store Closures; SM Energy, NOG to Buy XCL Resources; Uber, Lyft Worker Classification Heads to Massachusetts Ballot
Jun 27 NVO Hims & Hers Health Stock Is Sliding Thursday: What's Going On?
Jun 27 NVO Walgreens cuts EPS guidance, plans to close more stores
Jun 27 NVO Novo Nordisk's (NVO) Hypertension Drug Study Fails to Meet Goal
Jun 27 NVO Market Chatter: Novo Nordisk to Limit Launch of Wegovy in China, Executive Says
Hormones

A hormone (from the Greek participle “ὁρμῶ”, "to arouse") is any member of a class of signaling molecules produced by glands in multicellular organisms that are transported by the circulatory system to target distant organs to regulate physiology and behavior. Hormones have diverse chemical structures, mainly of three classes: eicosanoids, steroids, and amino acid/protein derivatives (amines, peptides, and proteins). The glands that secrete hormones comprise the endocrine signaling system. The term hormone is sometimes extended to include chemicals produced by cells that affect the same cell (autocrine or intracrine signalling) or nearby cells (paracrine signalling).
Hormones are used to communicate between organs and tissues for physiological regulation and behavioral activities, such as digestion, metabolism, respiration, tissue function, sensory perception, sleep, excretion, lactation, stress, growth and development, movement, reproduction, and mood. Hormones affect distant cells by binding to specific receptor proteins in the target cell resulting in a change in cell function. When a hormone binds to the receptor, it results in the activation of a signal transduction pathway that typically activates gene transcription resulting in increased expression of target proteins; non-genomic effects are more rapid, and can be synergistic with genomic effects. Amino acid–based hormones (amines and peptide or protein hormones) are water-soluble and act on the surface of target cells via second messengers; steroid hormones, being lipid-soluble, move through the plasma membranes of target cells (both cytoplasmic and nuclear) to act within their nuclei.
Hormone secretion may occur in many tissues. Endocrine glands are the cardinal example, but specialized cells in various other organs also secrete hormones. Hormone secretion occurs in response to specific biochemical signals from a wide range of regulatory systems. For instance, serum calcium concentration affects parathyroid hormone synthesis; blood sugar (serum glucose concentration) affects insulin synthesis; and because the outputs of the stomach and exocrine pancreas (the amounts of gastric juice and pancreatic juice) become the input of the small intestine, the small intestine secretes hormones to stimulate or inhibit the stomach and pancreas based on how busy it is. Regulation of hormone synthesis of gonadal hormones, adrenocortical hormones, and thyroid hormones is often dependent on complex sets of direct influence and feedback interactions involving the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA), -gonadal (HPG), and -thyroid (HPT) axes.
Upon secretion, certain hormones, including protein hormones and catecholamines, are water-soluble and are thus readily transported through the circulatory system. Other hormones, including steroid and thyroid hormones, are lipid-soluble; to allow for their widespread distribution, these hormones must bond to carrier plasma glycoproteins (e.g., thyroxine-binding globulin (TBG)) to form ligand-protein complexes. Some hormones are completely active when released into the bloodstream (as is the case for insulin and growth hormones), while others are prohormones that must be activated in specific cells through a series of activation steps that are commonly highly regulated. The endocrine system secretes hormones directly into the bloodstream, typically via fenestrated capillaries, whereas the exocrine system secretes its hormones indirectly using ducts. Hormones with paracrine function diffuse through the interstitial spaces to nearby target tissue.

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