Hi everyone! I have a Biology SAC coming up on Homeostasis, negative feedback system, how blood glucose is regulated, signalling molecules, signal transduction pathway and the causes, symptoms and effect of Diabetes Type 1 & 2 (also the difference between the two).
I am having major trouble with learning the signalling molecules (hormones, neurohormones and neurotransmitters)- what exactly do they do and how does it work? What are the diiferences?
Also I am confused about the signal transduction process- how does it work?
I will REALLY APPRECIATE any help! Thank you!

Homeostasis: is the maintenance of a relatively stable internal environment, within a narrow bandwidth, despite changes/fluctuations in the external environment.
Negative feedback system: in a negative feed back system the response acts in the opposite direction to the stimulus, thus generally restoring the stimulus to its optimal/original state or just below it.
How blood glucose is regulated: in the pancreas a group of cells called the Islets of Langerhans detect the the stimulus (glucose concentration in the blood) the stimulus may be excessively above normal or below normal. The Effectors, Alpha and Beta cell, also found in the pancreas then release glucagon- liver (secondary effector) is 'told' to convert glycogen into glucose- and insulin- encourages body cells to absorb more glucose thus reducing glucose concentration in the blood- accordingly. When Blood glucose levels are above normal bandwidth Alpha cells produce less glucagon and Beta cells increase production of Insulin, and so the stimulus dives to bellow the optimal bandwidth and so Alpha Cells produce more Glucagon and less insulin causing blood glucose level to go above normal- this is a prime example of a negative feed back loop in which no exact level is maintained but fluctuations occur at a close bandwidth.
Signal transduction pathway and the causes: A signal transduction is described as being a Cascade of events that detect, amplify and respond to a stimuli usually by changes in enzyme activity(e.g. Activation of an enzyme), activation of genetic material(transcription factors) or opening or closing of ion channels. In this Cascade the original signal is converted form one form to another and is amplified along the way, meaning small amounts of original signalling molecule can still cause 'large' effects. A signal transduction occurs when a ligand(signalling molecule that attaches onto a receptor) attaches onto a receptor which activates.....(don't think you need to know anything specific after this)... and signal transduction begins. Let me know if you do want to know about what gets activated and stuff

Hormones: Is a chemical substance released by a cell, gland or organ that effect the activities of other specific target cells else where in the body or even itself, hormones are usually transported in the blood. Basically used for regulation and communication.
Steroid Hormones: lipid based and so can travel freely through the plasma membrane, yet they require a protein carrier molecule in order to travel through the blood as they are insoluble; receptors are found in the cytoplasm.
Protein and Peptide: composed of amino acids, peptide hormones contain less than 200 AA whilst protein hormones contain 200+ AA.
Amino Acid Derivatives: as the name suggests these are modified amino acids.
These two are hydrophilic hormones and so do not require any carrier molecule to travel in the blood, yet being lipophilic means that they require receptors on the cell membrane due to their inability to pass through the membrane. They also require a secondary messenger(G Protein) to carry/pass on the 'message'.
Neurotransmitters: typical neurotransmitters are released by neurones to cross the synapse and carry on a message, they do so by binding onto receptors on the next neurone. Neurotransmitters only last for fractions of a second and are broken down quite rapidly by enzymes, they also travel tiny amount(across the synaptic gap).
Neurohormone: is secreted by neurosecretory cells(typically found in the hypothalamus) and can target specific cells far away its point of release. Unlike neurotransmitters neurohormones can travel further and last longer hence the reason why they are called neurohormes; they may also act as neurotransmitters an example would be dopamine. So in a way a neurohormones is like a hormone and neurotransmitter hybrid(not a great definition)
Good Luck

let me know if I missed anything or if I wasn't clear.