Ontogenesis of thyroid hormone receptor in foetal lambs

1987 ◽  
Vol 116 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz Ferreiro ◽  
Juan Bernal ◽  
Brian J. Potter

Abstract. Affinity and concentration of T3 receptor sites have been measured in nuclear extracts from the brain, lung, and liver of foetal lamb tissues at 50, 82 and 100 days of gestational age. Control experiments indicated that the concentration of sites was similar when nuclear extracts or purified nuclei were used, and that maximal binding capacity was obtained after 2 h of incubation at 22°C. The pattern of receptor binding affinity when different thyroid hormone analogs were used in competition assays with [125I]T3 was T3 > 3,5,3'-triiodothyroacetic acid (Triac) > T4 in the lung and brain. In the liver, Triac had the same affinity as T3. The sedimentation coefficient of the receptor was 3.6 S in lung. There were minor changes of receptor affinity in the brain, but not in the lung or liver, during development with the highest value at 82 days. Receptor concentration increased twice from 50 to 82 days. Since in the brain this is the period of neuroblast proliferation, the results suggest that thyroid hormone is required for proper foetal lamb development and, in particular, for neuroblast proliferation and/or differentiation.

1996 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 1909-1920 ◽  
Author(s):  
G X Tong ◽  
M Jeyakumar ◽  
M R Tanen ◽  
M K Bagchi

Unliganded thyroid hormone receptor (TR) functions as a transcriptional repressor of genes bearing thyroid hormone response elements in their promoters. Binding of hormonal ligand to the receptor releases the transcriptional silencing and leads to gene activation. Previous studies showed that the silencing activity of TR is located within the C-terminal ligand-binding domain (LBD) of the receptor. To dissect the role of the LBD in receptor-mediated silencing, we used a cell-free transcription system containing HeLa nuclear extracts in which exogenously added unliganded TRbeta repressed the basal level of RNA polymerase II-driven transcription from a thyroid hormone response element-linked template. We designed competition experiments with a peptide fragment containing the entire LBD (positions 145 to 456) of TRbeta. This peptide, which lacks the DNA-binding domain, did not affect basal RNA synthesis from the thyroid hormone response element-linked promoter when added to a cell-free transcription reaction mixture. However, the addition of the LBD peptide to a reaction mixture containing TRbeta led to a complete reversal of receptor-mediated transcriptional silencing in the absence of thyroid hormone. An LBD peptide harboring point mutations, which severely impair receptor dimerization, also inhibited efficiently the silencing activity of TR, indicating that the relief of repression by the LBD was not due to the sequestration of TR or its heterodimeric partner retinoid X receptor into inactive homo- or heterodimers. We postulate that the LBD peptide competed with TR for a regulatory molecule, termed a corepressor, that exists in the HeLa nuclear extracts and is essential for efficient receptor-mediated gene repression. We have identified the region from positions 145 to 260 (the D domain) of the LBD as a potential binding site of the putative corepressor. We observed further that a peptide containing the LBD of retinoic acid receptor (RAR) competed for TR-mediated silencing, suggesting that the RAR LBD may bind to the same corepressor activity as the TR LBD. Interestingly, the RAR LBD complexed with its cognate ligand, all-trans retinoic acid, failed to compete for transcriptional silencing by TRbeta, indicating that the association of the LBD with the corepressor is ligand dependent. Finally, we provide strong biochemical evidence supporting the existence of the corepressor activity in the HeLa nuclear extracts. Our studies demonstrated that the silencing activity of TR was greatly reduced in the nuclear extracts preincubated with immobilized, hormone-free glutathione S-transferase-LBD fusion proteins, indicating that the corepressor activity was depleted from these extracts through protein-protein interactions with the LBD. Similar treatment with immobilized, hormone-bound glutathione S-transferase-LBD, on the other hand, failed to deplete the corepressor activity from the nuclear extracts, indicating that ligand binding to the LBD disrupts its interaction with the corepressor. From these results, we propose that a corepressor binds to the LBD of unliganded TR and critically influences the interaction of the receptor with the basal transcription machinery to promote silencing. Ligand binding to TR results in the release of the corepressor from the LBD and triggers the reversal of silencing by allowing the events leading to gene activation to proceed.


Endocrinology ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 152 (3) ◽  
pp. 1136-1142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmen Grijota-Martínez ◽  
Eric Samarut ◽  
Thomas S. Scanlan ◽  
Beatriz Morte ◽  
Juan Bernal

Thyroid hormone analogs with selective actions through specific thyroid hormone receptor (TR) subtypes are of great interest. They might offer the possibility of mimicking physiological actions of thyroid hormone with receptor subtype or tissue specificity with therapeutic aims. They are also pharmacological tools to dissect biochemical pathways mediated by specific receptor subtypes, in a complementary way to mouse genetic modifications. In this work, we studied the in vivo activity in developing rats of two thyroid hormone agonists, the TRβ-selective GC-24 and the TRα-selective CO23. Our principal goal was to check whether these compounds were active in the rat brain. Analog activity was assessed by measuring the expression of thyroid hormone target genes in liver, heart, and brain, after administration to hypothyroid rats. GC-24 was very selective for TRβ and lacked activity on the brain. On the other hand, CO23 was active in liver, heart, and brain on genes regulated by either TRα or TRβ. This compound, previously shown to be TRα-selective in tadpoles, displayed no selectivity in the rat in vivo.


1990 ◽  
Vol 123 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz Ferreiro ◽  
Rosa Pastor ◽  
Juan Bernal

Abstract. The concentration and occupancy of the thyroid hormone receptor have been measured in rat brain nuclear extracts at the end of the fetal period and during the postnatal period. Receptor occupancy attained maximal values at postnatal day 15 (52% of total receptor binding sites occupied by T3) and correlated with plasma and cytosol total and free T3. The values for these parameters showed greater differences throughout development than did receptor occupancy. From gestational day 21 to postnatal day 15, total T3 increased in plasma from 0.18 to 1 nmol/l and in cytosol from 1 to 7.5 pmol/l. Free T3 increased in plasma from 1.2 to 6 pmol/l and in cytosol from 8 to 59 pmol/l. Nuclear free T3, calculated on the basis of receptor occupancy, and Kd increased in parallel, from 39.8 to 107 pmol/l at the same ages. Values for nuclear free T3 were between 2 and 5 times those in cytosol and between 10 and 40 times those in plasma, suggesting the presence of a small free T3 gradient from plasma to the nucleus. All of the above changes take place during the critical period of oligodendrocyte differentiation and the start of myelin gene expression, suggesting that thyroid hormone influences these important events of brain maturation.


1989 ◽  
Vol 120 (2) ◽  
pp. 237-243 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ichikawa ◽  
J. Brtko ◽  
L. J. DeGroot ◽  
K. Hashizume ◽  
T. Yamada

ABSTRACT Rat liver nuclear thyroid hormone receptor lost 3,5,3′-tri-iodo-l-thyronine (T3)-binding activity with a half-life of 14 days, 4 h, 139 min, 62 min, 16 min or 6 min at 0, 36, 38, 40, 43 or 45 °C respectively, when present in crude nuclear extracts. Glycerol increased the half-life of the receptor during heat inactivation. Protection was reversible by removing the glycerol. The receptor was unstable at a pH below 6·0 or above 10·0. We also found a loss of the receptor activity during the separation of bound and free hormone using the resin test. Of several conditions tested for the separation of bound and free hormone, the addition of heated nuclear extract gave the most accurate estimation of bound hormone when using the resin test. Using these characteristics of the receptor, we purified the receptor to 1220 pmol T3-binding capacity/mg protein with a final yield of 14·6 μg/4 kg rat liver. Journal of Endocrinology (1989) 120, 237–243


2009 ◽  
Vol 297 (6) ◽  
pp. E1238-E1246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul J. Davis ◽  
Faith B. Davis ◽  
Hung-Yun Lin ◽  
Shaker A. Mousa ◽  
Min Zhou ◽  
...  

A thyroid hormone receptor on integrin αvβ3 that mediates cell surface-initiated nongenomic actions of thyroid hormone on tumor cell proliferation and on angiogenesis has been described. Transduction of the hormone signal into these recently recognized proliferative effects is by extracellular-regulated kinases 1/2 (ERK1/2). Other nongenomic actions of the hormone may be transduced by phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) and are initiated in cytoplasm or at the cell surface. PI3K-mediated effects are important to angiogenesis or other recently appreciated cell functions but apparently not to tumor cell division. For those actions of thyroid hormone [l-thyroxine (T4) and 3,3′-5-triiodo-l-thyronine (T3)] that begin at the integrin receptor, tetraiodothyroacetic acid (tetrac) is an inhibitor of and probe for the participation of the receptor in downstream intracellular events. In addition, tetrac has actions initiated at the integrin receptor that are unrelated to inhibition of the effects of T4 and T3 but do involve gene transcription in tumor cells. Discussed here are the implications of translating these nongenomic mechanisms of thyroid hormone analogs into clinical cancer cell biology, tumor-related angiogenesis, and modulation of angiogenesis that is not related to cancer.


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