4.5 Article

Changes in Thyroid Status During Perinatal Development of MCT8-Deficient Male Mice

Journal

ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 154, Issue 7, Pages 2533-2541

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/en.2012-2031

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [DK15070]
  2. Sherman family [SAF2011-25608]
  3. Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red Enfermedades Raras Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Madrid, Spain)
  4. National Institutes of Health [F32 DK91016]
  5. Junta de Ampliacion de Estudio fellowship (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, Spain)

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Patients with the monocarboxylate transporter 8 (MCT8) deficiency syndrome present with a severe psychomotor retardation and abnormal serum thyroid hormone (TH) levels, consisting of high T-3 and low T-4 and rT(3). Mice deficient in Mct8 replicate the thyroid phenotype of patients with the MCT8 gene mutations. We analyzed the serum TH levels and action in the cerebral cortex and in the liver during the perinatal period of mice deficient in Mct8 to assess how the thyroid abnormalities of Mct8 deficiency develop and to study the thyroidal status of specific tissues. During perinatal life, the thyroid phenotype of Mct8-deficient mice is different from that of adult mice. They manifest hyperthyroxinemia at embryonic day 18 and postnatal day 0. This perinatal hyperthyroxinemia is accompanied by manifestations of TH excess as evidenced by a relative increase in the expression of genes positively regulated by T-3 in both the cerebral cortex and liver. An increased tissue accumulation of T-4 and T-3 and the expression of TH alternative transporters, including Lat1, Lat2, Oatp1c1, and Oatp3a1 in the cortex and Lat2 and Oatp1b2 in the liver, suggested that Mct8 deficiency either directly interferes with tissue efflux of TH or indirectly activates other transporters to increase TH uptake. This report is the first to identify that the ontogenesis of TH abnormalities in Mct8-deficient mice manifests with TH excess in the perinatal period.

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