Effects of thyroid hormones on the receptor level in estrogen target organs |
| |
Authors: | H A Eriksson B Freyschuss |
| |
Affiliation: | Reproductive Endocrinology Research Unit, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden. |
| |
Abstract: | The influence of thyroid hormones on the turnover of cytoplasmic estrogen receptors in the liver, kidney and uterus of intact and ovariectomized female rats was studied under in vivo conditions. Thyroidectomy had no significant effect on the receptor level in the uterus but caused a substantial reduction of the receptor content in the liver and kidney. In livers of intact and ovariectomized animals receptor values were reduced with 70 and 80%, respectively, 30 days after thyroidectomy. Substitution with triiodothyronine (T3) restored the hepatic estrogen receptor concentration in thyroidectomized rats to the preoperative level. If rats that had been both ovariectomized and thyroidectomized were substituted with thyroid hormone for the same time period, the receptor level was increased but did not reach the level seen in animals that had been ovariectomized only. The effects of thyroid hormone substitution was found to be dose dependent and paradoxical. Thus, a high dose of 50 micrograms/day of triiodothyronine given to intact animals for nine days caused a 30% reduction in the hepatic receptor content. The same level of reduction was seen in the ovariectomized rat given a hormone dose of only 1 micrograms/day. When this type of rats was treated with the higher dose of triiodothyronine the reduction in hepatic estrogen receptors was 50%. These results are discussed in relation to existing information concerning the multihormonal regulation of estrogen receptor concentration in the rat liver. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|