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We have examined the effects of 3,5 3'-triiodo-L-thyronine (T3), dexamethasone, bromocriptine, thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) and estrogen on the levels of pituitary alpha and TSH-beta protein and mRNA levels in hypothyroid mice. After 3 days of treatment with T3 (0.5 micrograms/100 g body weight) serum TSH, alpha and TSH-beta levels were 77%, 79% and 44% of control, respectively. Pituitary alpha and TSH-beta mRNA content was estimated by dot blot hybridization of total RNA with 32P-labelled alpha and TSH-beta plasmid probes. There was no change in alpha mRNA after 3 days of T3 treatment but TSH-beta mRNA had decreased to 60% of control. With T3 at 2 micrograms/100 g body weight for 3 days, TSH protein was 27% of control and TSH-beta was undetectable, but there was no change in alpha. TSH-beta mRNA was decreased to 40% of control at 1 day and was barely detectable at 3 days, whereas alpha mRNA was 70% of control at 1 day and 42% at 3 days. Dexamethasone and bromocriptine caused no consistent change in pituitary levels of alpha and TSH-beta mRNA. Treatment with TRH caused small increases in serum TSH and in both alpha and TSH-beta mRNA levels. Estrogen treatment increased serum TSH and subunit levels and TSH-beta mRNA, but not alpha. We conclude that thyroid hormones decrease alpha and beta subunit mRNA levels discordantly in both the hypothyroid pituitary and in thyrotropic tumors and that the suppressive effect of thyroid hormone is the major regulator of TSH.  相似文献   

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The contents of mRNAs encoding LH beta-, FSH beta-, TSH beta- and common alpha-subunit precursor molecules were measured in food-deprived and subsequently re-fed male Japanese quail. Pituitary LH beta, FSH beta and common alpha mRNA levels were decreased by starvation, and increased to the control levels by re-feeding. The rates of decreases of LH beta and common alpha mRNA levels were greater the corresponding rate for FSH beta levels. Pituitary TSH beta mRNA levels were not decreased by starvation, but increased transitorily by re-feeding. Plasma LH and triiodothyronine levels were decreased by starvation, and then increased to control levels by re-feeding, while plasma FSH and thyroxine levels did not show significant changes. Plasma LH and FSH levels showed positive correlations with pituitary common alpha and FSH beta mRNA levels, respectively, while plasma thyroxine levels showed a negative correlation with TSH beta mRNA levels. Hepatic weight was decreased slightly but significantly by starvation, and then showed a remarkable rebound after re-feeding was started. These results suggest that LH synthesis and secretion are more sensitive to starvation than FSH synthesis and secretion in Japanese quail, and that LH production recovered to initial levels within several days when birds were fully fed. Also, there is a possibility that the synthesis of TSH is accelerated transitorily by re-feeding. Furthermore, these results showed that there are different relationships between the plasma levels of LH, FSH, and TSH and the various hormone subunit mRNA levels. The remarkable change in hepatic weight leads us to assume that hepatic thyroid hormone metabolism is affected by starvation and re-feeding.  相似文献   

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An alpha-subunit-secreting cell line derived from a mouse thyrotrope tumor.   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The anterior pituitary contains multiple distinct endocrine cell types that secrete individual hormones. To derive a pure cell culture population in which to study the regulation of the alpha-subunit of TSH free of other hormones and cell types, we have developed a clonal continuous cell line from the transplantable thyrotrope tumor MGH101A. This cell line expresses alpha-subunit mRNA, secretes alpha-subunit protein, and has maintained a stable phenotype for over 3 yr in culture. However, as is the case for the transplantable tumor from which they are derived, these cells do not express the beta-subunit of TSH or respond to TRH or thyroid hormone. We have used this cell line to investigate regulation of the alpha-subunit mRNA by the second messengers, cAMP and phorbol esters, and by glucocorticoids. Phorbol esters increase alpha-subunit mRNA levels significantly (3.5-fold), as does cAMP (1.8-fold). In contrast, glucocorticoids decrease mRNA levels from cAMP-induced or basal levels (2-fold). These cells should prove valuable for study of alpha-subunit gene expression in an isolated renewable clonal cell culture system.  相似文献   

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The hypothalamic peptide hormone TRH is also found in other tissues, including the thyroid. While TRH may be regulated by T3 in the hypothalamus, other regulators of TRH have not been identified and the regulation of TRH in nonhypothalamic tissues is unknown. We recently demonstrated the biosynthesis of TRH in the CA77 neoplastic thyroidal C cell line. We studied the regulation of TRH by dexamethasone in this cell line because glucocorticoids have been postulated to inhibit TSH secretion by decreasing TRH in the hypothalamus. Furthermore, TRH in the thyroid inhibits thyroid hormone release. Thus by regulating thyroidal TRH, glucocorticoids could also directly affect thyroid hormone secretion. Treatment of CA77 cells for 4 days with dexamethasone produced dose-dependent increases in both TRH mRNA and cellular and secreted TRH. Increases in TRH mRNA and peptide levels could be seen with 10(-9) M dexamethasone. A 4.8-fold increase in TRH mRNA and a 4-fold increase in secreted peptide were seen with 10(-7) M dexamethasone. Dexamethasone treatment did not increase beta-actin mRNA levels or cell growth. These results suggest that glucocorticoids may be physiological regulators of TRH in normal C cells. In addition to their inhibitory effects on TSH, glucocorticoids may decrease thyroid hormone levels by increasing thyroidal TRH. Since the glucocorticoid effects on C cell TRH are the converse of what is expected for hypothalamic TRH, glucocorticoid effects in these two tissues may be mediated by different regulators.  相似文献   

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Hypothalamic thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) stimulates thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) secretion from the anterior pituitary. TSH then initiates thyroid hormone (TH) synthesis and release from the thyroid gland. Although opposing TRH and TH inputs regulate the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis, TH negative feedback is thought to be the primary regulator. This hypothesis, however, has yet to be proven in vivo. To elucidate the relative importance of TRH and TH in regulating the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis, we have generated mice that lack either TRH, the beta isoforms of TH receptors (TRbeta KO), or both (double KO). TRbeta knock-out (KO) mice have significantly higher TH and TSH levels compared with wild-type mice, in contrast to double KO mice, which have reduced TH and TSH levels. Unexpectedly, hypothyroid double KO mice also failed to mount a significant rise in serum TSH levels, and pituitary TSH immunostaining was markedly reduced compared with all other hypothyroid mouse genotypes. This impaired TSH response, however, was not due to a reduced number of pituitary thyrotrophs because thyrotroph cell number, as assessed by counting TSH immunopositive cells, was restored after chronic TRH treatment. Thus, TRH is absolutely required for both TSH and TH synthesis but is not necessary for thyrotroph cell development.  相似文献   

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Thyroid hormones, T4 and T3, regulate their own production by feedback inhibition of TSH and TRH synthesis in the pituitary and hypothalamus when T3 binds to thyroid hormone receptors (TRs) that interact with the promoters of the genes for the TSH subunit and TRH. All TR isoforms are believed to be involved in the regulation of this endocrine axis, as evidenced by the massive dysregulation of TSH production in mice lacking all TR isoforms. However, the relative contributions of TR isoforms in the pituitary vs. the hypothalamus remain to be completely elucidated. Thus, to determine the relative contribution of pituitary expression of TR-alpha in the regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis, we selectively impaired TR-alpha function in TR-beta null mice (TR-beta-/-) by pituitary restricted expression of a dominant negative TR-beta transgene harboring a delta337T mutation. These animals exhibited 10-fold and 32-fold increase in T4 and TSH concentrations, respectively. Moreover, the negative regulation of TSH by exogenous T3 was completely absent and a paradoxical increase in TSH concentrations and TSH-beta mRNA was observed. In contrast, prepro-TRH expression levels in T3-treated TR-beta-/- were similar to levels observed in the delta337/TR-beta-/- mice, and ligand-independent activation of TSH in hypothyroid mice was equivalently impaired. Thus, isolated TR-beta deficiency in TRH paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus neurons and impaired function of all TRs in the pituitary recapitulate the baseline hormonal disturbances that characterize mice with complete absence of all TRs.  相似文献   

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TSH, LH and FSH, the three pituitary glycoprotein hormones, are each composed of a common alpha-subunit and a hormone specific beta-subunit. Testosterone is known to regulate all three intact hormones differently in the rodent. However, there is only one gene encoding the common alpha-subunit. In order to elucidate the effects of testosterone on TSH subunit synthesis and its regulation of the common alpha-subunit, two in vivo models were studied: castrate rat pituitary was used as a gonadotropin-enriched tissue; and mouse thyrotropic tumor was used as a thyrotropin-enriched tissue. Male castrate rats were treated with testosterone propionate, 500 micrograms/100 g BW, sc, for 11 days. Testosterone increased plasma TSH to 131% of control values (P less than 0.02), while plasma LH fell to undetectable levels, and plasma alpha-subunit fell to 14% of control values (P less than 0.001). Testosterone increased TSH-beta mRNA to 237% of control values (P less than 0.02), while alpha-subunit mRNA fell to 20% of control values (P less than 0.001). Hypothyroid mice bearing thyrotropic tumors were treated with testosterone propionate, 150 micrograms/100 g BW, sc, for 11 days. In this model plasma TSH-beta and alpha-subunit concentrations are 1000-fold higher than in non-tumor bearing animals, and the contribution of pituitary gonadotropes to plasma subunit concentrations is negligible. "Total" TSH-beta and alpha-subunit concentrations were estimated as one-half of intact TSH plus the respective free subunit concentration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) is a major stimulator of thyrotropin-stimulating hormone (TSH) synthesis in the anterior pituitary, though precisely how TRH stimulates the TSHβ gene remains unclear. Analysis of TRH-deficient mice differing in thyroid hormone status demonstrated that TRH was critical for the basal activity and responsiveness to thyroid hormone of the TSHβ gene. cDNA microarray and K-means cluster analyses with pituitaries from wild-type mice, TRH-deficient mice and TRH-deficient mice with thyroid hormone replacement revealed that the largest and most consistent decrease in expression in the absence of TRH and on supplementation with thyroid hormone was shown by the TSHβ gene, and the NR4A1 gene belonged to the same cluster as and showed a similar expression profile to the TSHβ gene. Immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that NR4A1 was expressed not only in ACTH- and FSH- producing cells but also in thyrotrophs and the expression was remarkably reduced in TRH-deficient pituitary. Furthermore, experiments in vitro demonstrated that incubation with TRH in GH4C1 cells increased the endogenous NR4A1 mRNA level by approximately 50-fold within one hour, and this stimulation was inhibited by inhibitors for PKC and ERK1/2. Western blot analysis confirmed that TRH increased NR4A1 expression within 2 h. A series of deletions of the promoter demonstrated that the region between bp -138 and +37 of the TSHβ gene was responsible for the TRH-induced stimulation, and Chip analysis revealed that NR4A1 was recruited to this region. Conversely, knockdown of NR4A1 by siRNA led to a significant reduction in TRH-induced TSHβ promoter activity. Furthermore, TRH stimulated NR4A1 promoter activity through the TRH receptor. These findings demonstrated that 1) TRH is a highly specific regulator of the TSHβ gene, and 2) TRH mediated induction of the TSHβ gene, at least in part by sequential stimulation of the NR4A1-TSHβ genes through a PKC and ERK1/2 pathway.  相似文献   

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TSH is a member of a family of heterodimeric glycoprotein hormones which have a common alpha-subunit but differ in their hormone-specific beta-subunit. To study the posttranslational processing and assembly of human TSH, eukaryotic expression vectors were constructed that contained either the human TSH beta gene only or both the TSH beta and alpha-genes. These vectors were transfected into Chinese hamster ovary cells and stable cell lines synthesizing TSH beta or TSH dimer were isolated. The kinetics of secretion of TSH beta and the rate of assembly of TSH dimer were compared to the known secretion and assembly of human LH and human CG. In the absence of the alpha-subunit, CG beta is secreted efficiently, but TSH and LH beta-subunits are slowly degraded intracellularly (t1/2 approximately equal to 6 h) and less than 10% is secreted into the medium. In the presence of the alpha-subunit CG beta was also secreted efficiently as dimer but only 50% of the LH beta appeared in the medium as LH dimer. However, unlike LH beta, the alpha-subunit efficiently combines with TSH beta since greater than 95% was secreted as TSH dimer. Thus, the determinants for human TSH beta secretion and assembly are unique from the other human glycoprotein hormone beta-subunits.  相似文献   

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Porcine thyroid follicles cultured in suspension for 96 h synthesized and secreted thyroid hormones in the presence of thyrotropin (TSH). The secretion of newly synthesized hormones was assessed by determining the contents of thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) in the media and by paperchromatographic analysis of 125I-labelled hormones in the media where the follicles were cultured in the presence and absence of inhibitors of hormone synthesis. The hormone synthesis and secretion was modified by exogenously added NaI (0.1-100 microM). The maximal response was obtained at 1 microM. Thyroid peroxidase (TPO) activity in the cultured follicles with TSH for 96 h was dose-dependently inhibited by NaI. One hundred microM of NaI completely inhibited TSH-induced TPO activity. Moreover, both epidermal growth factor (EGF: 10(-9) and 10(-8) M) and phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA: 10(-8) and 10(-7) M) inhibited de novo hormone synthesis. An induction of TPO activity by TSH was also inhibited by either agent. These data provide direct evidences that thyroid hormone synthesis is regulated by NaI as well as TSH at least in part via regulation of TPO activity and also that both EGF and PMA are inhibitory on thyroid hormone formation.  相似文献   

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Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) synthesized in the hypothalamus has the capability of inducing the release of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) from the anterior pituitary, which in turn stimulates the production of thyroid hormones in the thyroid gland. Immunoreactivity for TRH and TRH-like peptides has been found in some tissues outside the nervous system, including thyroid. It has been demonstrated that thyroid C-cells express authentic TRH, affecting thyroid hormone secretion by follicular cells. Therefore, C-cells could have a paracrine role in thyroid homeostasis. If this hypothesis is true, follicular cells should express TRH receptors (TRH-Rs) for the paracrine modulation carried out by C-cells. In order to elucidate whether or not C-cell TRH production could act over follicular cells modulating thyroid function, we studied TRH-Rs expression in PC C13 follicular cells from rat thyroid, by means of immunofluorescence technique and RT-PCR analysis. We also investigated the possibility that C-cells present TRH-Rs for the autocrine control of its own TRH production. Our results showed consistent expression for both receptors, TRH-R1 and TRH-R2, in 6-23 C-cells, and only for TRH-R2 in PC C13 follicular cells. Our data provide new evidence for a novel intrathyroidal regulatory pathway of thyroid hormone secretion via paracrine/autocrine TRH signaling.  相似文献   

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TRH synthesis in “mute” thyrotropinomas: cause‐effect or coincidence?   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
In the pathogenesis of thyrotropin (TSH) immunopositive pituitary adenomas, trigger mutagenetic events are well recognized. However, the way towards a clinical significant tumor is followed under the pressure of growth factors, among which the intrapituitary synthesis of releasing factors could bring a significant contribution. In this study, the production of thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) and beta TSH chain was evaluated at the mRNA level by in situ hybridization and end product level by immunohistochemistry, in 18 patients submitted to neurosurgery for pituitary macroadenomas. The hormonal sampling showed abnormal secretion for FSH in 5 and TSH in 4 patients. Seven cases were immunopositive for TSH, and expressed TSH β mRNA. All but one out of these expressed also TRH mRNA. FSH immunoreactivity was documented in 12/ 18, only one of these being negative for TRH mRNA. Paracrine TRH could contribute to the patogenesis of these "mute" adenomas.  相似文献   

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Thyrotropin (TSH), a glycoprotein hormone of the pituitary consisting of two subunits (alpha and beta), regulates thyroxine (T4) production by the thyroid gland. T4, in turn, regulates TSH biosynthesis and release. We have studied the regulation of the messenger RNA encoding the alpha subunit of TSH by T4 in pituitaries and in a transplantable thyrotropic tumor in mice. Hypothyroid male LAF1 mice bearing the TtT 97 thyrotropic tumor were injected daily with T4 for either 0, 1, 5, 12, or 33 days. Levels of TSH and its unassociated alpha (free alpha) and TSH-beta subunits in the plasma of these animals fell to less than 5% of control values after 33 days. Concentrations of TSH and TSH-beta in both tumor and pituitary also fell to low levels (less than 2% of control), while intracellular concentrations of free alpha subunit remained unchanged. Cellular levels of the mRNA encoding the precursor of the alpha subunit or pre-alpha (alpha mRNA) were measured by cell-free translation followed by electrophoretic analysis of immunoprecipitates of pre-alpha subunit and by nucleic acid hybridization to a radiolabeled cDNA probe specific for the alpha mRNA. In the pituitary, translatable and hybridizable alpha mRNA was decreased slightly after 1 day of T4 and decreased 40-50% after 5 and 12 days. In thyrotropic tumors, both translatable and total alpha mRNA showed a 60% decrease by 1 day and a maximum 85% decrease after 5, 12, and 33 days of T4. Therefore, T4 acts rapidly in vivo to decrease steady state alpha mRNA levels in the thyrotrope, and this decrease is maintained for the duration of treatment with thyroid hormone. This regulatory process is reflected in the sharp decreases in levels of TSH and free alpha subunit in plasma and in lower concentrations of the intact TSH in tissue. In contrast, the maintenance of high tissue concentrations of free alpha subunit after T4 treatment may be a reflection of alterations in a post-translational process specific for the free alpha subunit, as opposed to that of the intact TSH.  相似文献   

19.
To study the effect of human beta-endorphin (beta h-End) on pituitary response to gonadotropin-releasing hormone (LH-RH) and thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) in vitro, we used dispersed rat pituitary cells. When beta h-End (10(-7) M) was simultaneously added along with LH-RH, its stimulatory effect was blocked and naloxone (NAL, 10(-5) M) did not reverse the beta h-End inhibitory effect. NAL alone elicited an increase in LH release, but in the presence of both stimulants (LH-RH and NAL), LH secretion was lower than that observed with LH-RH alone. TRH stimulatory activity of TSH and PRL secretion was blunted by the presence of beta h-End (10(-7) M) and was not reversed by NAL (10(-5) and 10(-3) M). These data suggest that beta h-End directly blocks the LH, TSH- and PRL-secreting activity of both LH-RH and TRH at the pituitary level. This beta h-End effect is not reversed by the specific opiate receptor blocker NAL.  相似文献   

20.
AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) consists of three subunits: alpha, beta, and gamma. Two isoforms exist for the alpha-subunit (alpha(1) and alpha(2)), two for the beta-subunit (beta(1) and beta(2)), and three for the gamma-subunit (gamma(1), gamma(2), and gamma(3)). Although the specific roles of the beta- and gamma-subunits are not well understood, the alpha-subunit isoforms contain the catalytic site and also the phosphorylation/activation site for the upstream kinase. This study was designed to determine the role of thyroid hormones in controlling expression levels of these AMPK subunits and of one downstream target, acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), in muscle. AMPK subunit and ACC levels were determined by Western blots in control rats, in rats given 0.01% propylthiouracil (PTU) in drinking water for 3 wk, and in rats given 3 mg of thyroxine and 1 mg of triiodothyronine per kilogram chow for 1 or 3 wk. In gastrocnemius muscle, all isoforms of AMPK subunits were significantly increased in rats given thyroid hormones for 3 wk vs. those treated with PTU. Similar patterns were seen in individual muscle types. Expression of muscle ACC was also significantly increased in response to 3 wk of treatment with excess thyroid hormones. Muscle content of malonyl-CoA was elevated in PTU-treated rats and depressed in thyroid hormone-treated rats. These data provide evidence that skeletal muscle AMPK subunit and ACC expression is partially under the control of thyroid hormones.  相似文献   

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