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Thyroid hormone synthesis continues despite biallelic thyroglobulin mutation with cell death
Xiaohan Zhang, Aaron P. Kellogg, Cintia E. Citterio, Hao Zhang, Dennis Larkin, Yoshiaki Morishita, Héctor M. Targovnik, Viviana A. Balbi, Peter Arvan
Xiaohan Zhang, Aaron P. Kellogg, Cintia E. Citterio, Hao Zhang, Dennis Larkin, Yoshiaki Morishita, Héctor M. Targovnik, Viviana A. Balbi, Peter Arvan
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Research Article Endocrinology

Thyroid hormone synthesis continues despite biallelic thyroglobulin mutation with cell death

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Abstract

Complete absence of thyroid hormone is incompatible with life in vertebrates. Thyroxine is synthesized within thyroid follicles upon iodination of thyroglobulin conveyed from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), via the Golgi complex, to the extracellular follicular lumen. In congenital hypothyroidism from biallelic thyroglobulin mutation, thyroglobulin is misfolded and cannot advance from the ER, eliminating its secretion and triggering ER stress. Nevertheless, untreated patients somehow continue to synthesize sufficient thyroxine to yield measurable serum levels that sustain life. Here, we demonstrate that TGW2346R/W2346R humans, TGcog/cog mice, and TGrdw/rdw rats exhibited no detectable ER export of thyroglobulin, accompanied by severe thyroidal ER stress and thyroid cell death. Nevertheless, thyroxine was synthesized, and brief treatment of TGrdw/rdw rats with antithyroid drug was lethal to the animals. When untreated, remarkably, thyroxine was synthesized on the mutant thyroglobulin protein, delivered via dead thyrocytes that decompose within the follicle lumen, where they were iodinated and cannibalized by surrounding live thyrocytes. As the animals continued to grow goiters, circulating thyroxine increased. However, when TGrdw/rdw rats age, they cannot sustain goiter growth that provided the dying cells needed for ongoing thyroxine synthesis, resulting in profound hypothyroidism. These results establish a disease mechanism wherein dead thyrocytes support organismal survival.

Authors

Xiaohan Zhang, Aaron P. Kellogg, Cintia E. Citterio, Hao Zhang, Dennis Larkin, Yoshiaki Morishita, Héctor M. Targovnik, Viviana A. Balbi, Peter Arvan

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Figure 3

Tg is entrapped in the ER, yet it reaches the thyroid follicle lumen in TGrdw/rdw rats.

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Tg is entrapped in the ER, yet it reaches the thyroid follicle lumen in ...
(A) Representative H&E-stained images of thyroid glands from WT (+/+) and TGrdw/rdw rats (n = 6 per group), showing abnormally heterogeneous eosinophilic content in the follicle lumen, surrounded by abnormally swollen thyrocytes in TGrdw/rdw rats. Scale bars: 20 μm. (B) Representative distribution of aminopeptidase N by immunofluorescence (green) with DAPI counterstain (blue) in thyroid follicles of WT and TGrdw/rdw rats (n = 4 per group). For clarity, a yellow dotted line highlights the outer boundary of the thyroid follicular cells. Scale bars: 10 μm. (C) Representative distribution of BiP by immunofluorescence (red) with DAPI counterstain (blue) in thyroid follicles of WT and TGrdw/rdw rats (n = 4 per group). Scale bars: 10 μm. (D) Representative thyroid homogenates from WT and TGrdw/rdw rats were either mock digested or digested with endoglycosidase H (Endo H), followed by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting with anti-Tg (n = 4 animals per group). No Tg from TGrdw/rdw rats was endo H resistant. (E) Representative distribution of Tg in the thyroid follicle lumen by immunofluorescence (green) with DAPI counterstain (blue) from WT and TGrdw/rdw rats (n = 7 per group). Scale bars: 20 μm.

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