| Literature DB >> 29229863 |
G Sebastian Hönes1, Helena Rakov1, John Logan2, Xiao-Hui Liao3, Eugenie Werbenko2, Andrea S Pollard2, Stine M Præstholm4, Majken S Siersbæk4, Eddy Rijntjes5, Janina Gassen1, Sören Latteyer1, Kathrin Engels1, Karl-Heinz Strucksberg1, Petra Kleinbongard6, Denise Zwanziger1, Jan Rozman7,8, Valerie Gailus-Durner7, Helmut Fuchs7, Martin Hrabe de Angelis7,8,9, Ludger Klein-Hitpass10, Josef Köhrle5, David L Armstrong11, Lars Grøntved4, J H Duncan Bassett2, Graham R Williams2, Samuel Refetoff3,12,13, Dagmar Führer1, Lars C Moeller14.
Abstract
Thyroid hormone (TH) and TH receptors (TRs) α and β act by binding to TH response elements (TREs) in regulatory regions of target genes. This nuclear signaling is established as the canonical or type 1 pathway for TH action. Nevertheless, TRs also rapidly activate intracellular second-messenger signaling pathways independently of gene expression (noncanonical or type 3 TR signaling). To test the physiological relevance of noncanonical TR signaling, we generated knockin mice with a mutation in the TR DNA-binding domain that abrogates binding to DNA and leads to complete loss of canonical TH action. We show that several important physiological TH effects are preserved despite the disruption of DNA binding of TRα and TRβ, most notably heart rate, body temperature, blood glucose, and triglyceride concentration, all of which were regulated by noncanonical TR signaling. Additionally, we confirm that TRE-binding-defective TRβ leads to disruption of the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis with resistance to TH, while mutation of TRα causes a severe delay in skeletal development, thus demonstrating tissue- and TR isoform-specific canonical signaling. These findings provide in vivo evidence that noncanonical TR signaling exerts physiologically important cardiometabolic effects that are distinct from canonical actions. These data challenge the current paradigm that in vivo physiological TH action is mediated exclusively via regulation of gene transcription at the nuclear level.Entities:
Keywords: cardiometabolic effects; noncanonical signaling; skeleton; thyroid hormone action; thyroid hormone receptor
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29229863 PMCID: PMC5748168 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1706801115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205