Nuclear triiodothyronine receptors and metabolic response in perinatally protein-deprived rats
- 1 December 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Acta Endocrinologica
- Vol. 104 (4) , 450-455
- https://doi.org/10.1530/acta.0.1040450
Abstract
Pregnant rats from day 14 of pregnancy and pups were fed a control diet (24% casein) or a deprived diet (8% casein) to obtain a control and a pre- and postnatal protein-deprived group. From 50 days of age, all groups were fed a balanced commercial stock diet for different periods. A significant reduction in body wt was observed in the perinatally protein-deprived group (PPD) after the different periods of nutritional recovery studied. Maximal binding capacity (MBC) and apparent affinity constant (Ka) of liver nuclear T3[triiodothyronine]-receptors in the PPD group were similar to those in the control group. Mitochondrial .alpha.-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (.alpha.-GPD) and cytosolic malic enzyme (ME) activity were significantly increased in the PPD group in all the periods of nutritional recovery studied, except in the 8 mo. old group where it was nonsignificant. Plasma T3 levels were higher in rats 3 and 15 days after the removal of the hypoprotein diet while it was normal after longer periods of nutritional recovery. Serum T4 was not modified in any gorup. Protein undernutrition during perinatal life may induce an activation of hepatic T3-dependent enzymes which persists even after long periods of nutritional recovery. The lack of modification at the nuclear T3-receptor level, where supposedly the first T3-signal takes place, raises the possibility of an amplification of this signal at a step beyond the receptor.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- [37] Malic enzymePublished by Elsevier ,1969