Development and hormonal control of thioredoxin and the thioredoxin-reductase system in the rat liver during the perinatal period

Abstract
The development and hormonal regulation of thioredoxin and of the thioredoxin-reductase system were investigated during the perinatal period in rat liver. An immunological procedure was developed in order to quantify thioredoxin in fetal and neonatal hepatocytes. Both immunoreactive thioredoxin and thioredoxin-reductase activity appeared on day 16.5 of pregnancy. The level of immunoreactive thioredoxin increased during the late fetal period, and its level was the same 24 h after birth. Moreover, its development was not subjected to hormonal regulation by corticosteroids and glucagon. In contrast, thioredoxin-reductase activity increased 3 times during the late fetal period and presented a marked increase 24 h after birth. In the absence of glucocorticoids there was no increase in the level of thioredoxin reductase, while administration of hydrocortisone acetate and glucagon to fetuses prematurely evoked its activity. This study suggests that if thioredoxin acts physiologically, this activity is related to the state of reduction of the molecule rather than to the total concentration in the liver.