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The pineal gland is present in almost all vertebrates, but is absent in protochordates in which there is a simple pineal homologue. The hagfish , archaic vertebrates, lack a pineal gland. [ 7 ] In some species of amphibians and reptiles, the gland is linked to a light-sensing organ, variously called the parietal eye , the pineal eye or the ...
1.2.3 Skin. 1.2.4 Teeth. 1.2.5 Eyes. ... Part of a series of lists about: Human anatomy; ... Pineal gland. Pinealocyte; Cells derived from mesoderm
Peyer's patches (or glands) ileum, lymphatic glands Pineal gland: brain: melatonin: 32 Prostate: surrounds the urethra just below the urinary bladder: tubulo-alveolar 33 Pyloric glands: antrum of the pylorus, stomach: mucous, gastrin: simple branched tubular 34 Sebaceous gland: skin: sebum acinar - branched 35 Skene's gland, lesser vestibular ...
The pineal gland is located in the diencephalon of the brain. It primarily releases melatonin , which influences daily rhythms and may have an antigonadotropic effect in humans. [ citation needed ] It may also influence the melanotropes and melanocytes located in the skin.
In humans, the major endocrine glands are the thyroid, parathyroid, pituitary, pineal, and adrenal glands, and the (male) testis and (female) ovaries. The hypothalamus, pancreas, and thymus also function as endocrine glands, among other functions. (The hypothalamus and pituitary glands are organs of the neuroendocrine system.
Greek physician Galen was the first to give written description about the pineal gland in the 2nd century CE. [8] He indicated that the structure as an part of the brain was already known to earlier Greek scholars, crediting Herophilus (325–280 BCE) as the first to have described the possible role of the gland. [9]
The parietal eye is a part of the epithalamus, which can be divided into two major parts—the epiphysis (the pineal organ; or the pineal gland, if it is mostly endocrine) and the parapineal organ (often called the parietal eye or, if it is photoreceptive, the third eye).
The epithalamus is a tiny structure that comprises the habenular trigone, the pineal gland, and the habenular commissure. It is wired with the limbic system and basal ganglia . Species that possess a photoreceptive parapineal organ show asymmetry in the epithalamus at the habenula, to the left (dorsal).