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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Thyroid hormones
are essential for vertebrate development. There is a characteristic rise
in thyroid hormone levels in blood during critical periods of thyroid
hormone-regulated development. Thyroid hormones are lipophilic
compounds, which readily partition from an aqueous environment into
a lipid environment. Thyroid hormone distributor proteins are required
to ensure adequate distribution of thyroid hormones, throughout
the aqueous environment of the blood, and to counteract the avid
partitioning of thyroid hormones into the lipid environment of cell
membranes. In human blood, these proteins are albumin, transthyretin
and thyroxine-binding globulin. We analyzed the developmental profile
of thyroid hormone distributor proteins in serum from a representative
of each order of marsupials (M. eugenii; S.crassicaudata), a
reptile (C. porosus), in two species of salmonoid fishes (S. salar; O.
tshawytsch), and throughout a calendar year for sea bream (S. aurata).
We demonstrated that during development, these animals have a
thyroid hormone distributor protein present in their blood which is not
present in the adult blood. At least in mammals, this additional protein
has higher affinity for thyroid hormones than the thyroid hormone
distributor proteins in the blood of the adult. In fish, reptile and
polyprotodont marsupial, this protein was transthyretin. In a diprotodont
marsupial, it was thyroxine-binding globulin. We propose an
hypothesis that an augmented thyroid hormone distributor protein
network contributes to the rise in total thyroid hormone levels in the
blood during development.
Description
Keywords
Transthyretin Thyroxine-binding globulin Albumin
Citation
Samantha J. Richardson, Julie A. Monk, Caroline A. Shepherdley, Lars O. E. Ebbesson, Frank Sin, Deborah M. Power, Peter B. Frappell, Josef Köhrle, and Marilyn B. Renfree, "Developmentally regulated thyroid hormone distributor proteins in marsupials, a reptile, and fish" in AJP - Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology 288: R1264–R1272, 2005.
Publisher
American Physiology Society