Literature DB >> 18020914

Amiodarone reversibly decreases sodium-iodide symporter mRNA expression at therapeutic concentrations and induces antioxidant responses at supraphysiological concentrations in cultured human thyroid follicles.

Kazuko Yamazaki1, Tomoaki Mitsuhashi, Emiko Yamada, Tetsu Yamada, Seiichi Kosaka, Kazue Takano, Takao Obara, Kanji Sato.   

Abstract

CONTEXT: Amiodarone, a potent antiarrhythmic, iodine-containing agent, is a highly active oxidant exerting cytotoxic effects on thyrocytes at pharmacological concentrations. Patients receiving amiodarone usually remain euthyroid, but occasionally develop thyroid dysfunction. Although there is a general consensus that amiodarone-associated hypothyroidism is iodine induced, the destructive mechanism of thyroid follicles in amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis remains unknown.
OBJECTIVE: To elucidate the mechanism by which amiodarone elicits thyroid dysfunction.
DESIGN: Human thyroid follicles were cultured with thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) and amiodarone at therapeutic (1-2 microM) and pharmacological (10-20 microM) concentrations, and the drug-induced effect on whole human gene expression was analyzed by cDNA microarray. Microarray data were confirmed by real-time PCR and Western blot. MAIN OUTCOMES: Amiodarone at 1-2 muM decreased the expression level of the sodium-iodide symporter (NIS) to nearly half, but did not affect genes participating in thyroid hormonogenesis (thyroid peroxidase, thyroglobulin, pendrin, and NADPH oxidase). Higher concentrations (10-20 microM) decreased the expression of all these genes, accompanied by increased expression of antioxidant proteins such as heme oxygenase 1 and ferritin. When thyroid follicles obtained from a patient with Graves' disease who had been treated with amiodarone were cultured in amiodarone-free medium, TSH-induced thyroid function was intact, suggesting that amiodarone at a maintenance dose did not elicit any cytotoxic effect on thyrocytes. The ultrastructural features of cultured thyroid follicles were compatible with these in vitro findings.
CONCLUSION: These in vitro and ex vivo findings suggest that patients taking maintenance doses of amiodarone usually remain euthyroid, probably due to escape from the Wolff-Chaikoff effect mediated by decreased expression of NIS mRNA. Further, amiodarone is not cytotoxic for thyrocytes at therapeutic concentrations but elicits cytotoxicity through oxidant activity at supraphysiological concentrations. We speculate that when amiodarone-induced prooxidant activity somehow exceeds the endogenous antioxidant capacity, the thyroid follicles will be destroyed and amiodarone-induced destructive thyrotoxicosis may develop.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18020914     DOI: 10.1089/thy.2007.0215

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Thyroid        ISSN: 1050-7256            Impact factor:   6.568


  7 in total

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Authors:  Kishiko Nakajima; Ken-Ichi Umino; Yoshiaki Azuma; Seiichi Kosaka; Kazue Takano; Takao Obara; Kanji Sato
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Review 2.  Iodine-induced thyroid dysfunction.

Authors:  Angela M Leung; Lewis E Braverman
Journal:  Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 3.243

Review 3.  Amiodarone and the thyroid: a 2012 update.

Authors:  F Bogazzi; L Tomisti; L Bartalena; F Aghini-Lombardi; E Martino
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4.  2018 European Thyroid Association (ETA) Guidelines for the Management of Amiodarone-Associated Thyroid Dysfunction.

Authors:  Luigi Bartalena; Fausto Bogazzi; Luca Chiovato; Alicja Hubalewska-Dydejczyk; Thera P Links; Mark Vanderpump
Journal:  Eur Thyroid J       Date:  2018-02-14

5.  Endoplasmic reticulum stress as a novel mechanism in amiodarone-induced destructive thyroiditis.

Authors:  Angela Lombardi; William Barlow Inabnet; Randall Owen; Kaitlyn Ellen Farenholtz; Yaron Tomer
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6.  Risk factors for amiodarone-induced thyroid dysfunction in Japan.

Authors:  Sayoko Kinoshita; Tomohiro Hayashi; Kyoichi Wada; Mikie Yamato; Takeshi Kuwahara; Toshihisa Anzai; Mai Fujimoto; Kouichi Hosomi; Mitsutaka Takada
Journal:  J Arrhythm       Date:  2016-05-05

7.  Inverse Association between Metformin and Amiodarone-Associated Extracardiac Adverse Events.

Authors:  Sayoko Kinoshita; Kouichi Hosomi; Satoshi Yokoyama; Mitsutaka Takada
Journal:  Int J Med Sci       Date:  2020-01-16       Impact factor: 3.738

  7 in total

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