The Site of the Molecular Defect in the Thyroid Gland of thehyt/hytMouse: Abnormalities in the TSH Receptor-G Protein Complex
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Thyroid®
- Vol. 1 (3) , 257-266
- https://doi.org/10.1089/thy.1991.1.257
Abstract
The hyt/hyt mouse has a severe and pervasive primary inherited hypothyroidism with significantly depressed serum T4, elevated serum and pituitary TSH, and reduced thyroid gland iodide uptake. Previous ultrastructural and histologic analysis of the hyt/hyt thyroid gland along with these biochemical abnormalities support an inherited defect in TSH responsiveness of the hyt/hyt thyroid gland. In order to evaluate the potential site of the defect in the hyt/hyt mouse, we have studied the hyt/hyt gland and hyt/hyt TSH from a biochemical and molecular standpoint. Based on demonstrated bioactivity of hyt/hyt serum in the McKenzie bioassay, this reduced responsiveness to TSH in the hyt/hyt mouse is not due to reduced bioactivity of hyt/hyt TSH or a major structural abnormality in the hyt/hyt TSH molecule. In comparison to hyt/ + euthyroid littermates and +/+ BALB/cBY progenitor strain mice, the hyt/hyt mouse demonstrates a twofold reduction in thyroid gland basal cAMP and a markedly diminished response of adenylyl cyclase to exogenous TSH. However, hyt/hyt cAMP production is equivalent to the euthyroid mice after stimulation of thyroid glands by forskolin, cholera toxin, PGE1, and isoproterenol. These results support a defect in the TSH-G protein-adenylyl cyclase system in the hyt/hyt thyroid gland. Specifically, these findings suggest that the hyt/hyt mouse has a defect in TSH responsivity due to an inherited defect in the thyroid gland TSH receptor molecule. Since the hyt/hyt gland makes T3 and T4 but at diminished levels, the proposed defect in the TSH receptor would still impart partial function. Both hyt/hyt and euthyroid hyt/ + littermates make TSH receptor mRNAs of 5500 and 2400 base pairs. This suggests that the receptor defect does not represent a major structural abnormality of the gene. The receptor defect could represent a reduction in receptor number, receptor-TSH affinity, or TSH receptor-G protein coupling. The specificity of this effect on adenylyl cyclase-cAMP is shown by the reduction of TSH-cAMP regulated thyroid peroxidase (TPO) and thyroglobulin mRNAs in the hyt/hyt thyroid gland. Given the importance of TPO and thyroglobulin in normal thyroid hormone synthesis, the reductions in TPO and thyroglobulin mRNAs in the hyt/hyt thyroid gland may underlie the significant decrease in thyroid hormone production by the hyt/hyt mouse.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Albright's Hereditary Osteodystrophy and Defective G ProteinsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1990
- Thyrotropin-induced expression of a gene for a ribosomal protein related to the trk oncogeneMolecular and Cellular Endocrinology, 1990
- Cloning, sequencing and expression of the human thyrotropin (TSH) receptor: Evidence for binding of autoantibodiesBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1989
- Molecular cloning, sequence and functional expression of the cDNA for the human thyrotropin receptorBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1989
- Evaluation and Characterization of the hyt/hyt Hypothyroid MouseNeuroendocrinology, 1989
- Identification of receptor contact site involved in receptor–G protein couplingNature, 1987
- Thyroglobulin gene activation by thyrotropin and cAMP in hormonally depleted FRTL-5 thyroid cellsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1986
- Thyrotropin and cyclic AMP regulation of ras proto‐oncogene expression in cultured thyroid cellsFEBS Letters, 1986
- The level of thyroglobulin mRNA is regulated by TSH both in vitro and in vivoBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1984
- Modulation by thyrotropin of thyroglobulin synthesis in cultured thyroid cells : Correlations with polysome profile and cytoplasmic thyroglobulin mRNA contentBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1980