| Literature DB >> 33488871 |
Abstract
Thyrotropin (TSH) is classically known to be regulated by negative feedback from thyroid hormones and stimulated by thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) from the hypothalamus. At the end of the 1990s, studies showed that thyrotroph cells from the pars tuberalis (PT) did not have TRH receptors and their TSH regulation was independent from TRH stimulation. Instead, PT-thyrotroph cells were shown to have melatonin-1 (MT-1) receptors and melatonin secretion from the pineal gland stimulates TSH-β subunit formation in PT. Electron microscopy examinations also revealed some important differences between PT and pars distalis (PD) thyrotrophs. PT-TSH also have low bioactivity in the peripheral circulation. Studies showed that they have different glycosylations and PT-TSH forms macro-TSH complexes in the periphery and has a longer half-life. Photoperiodism affects LH levels in animals via decreased melatonin causing increased TSH-β subunit expression and induction of deiodinase-2 (DIO-2) in the brain. Mammals need a light stimulus carried into the suprachiasmatic nucleus (which is a circadian clock) and then transferred to the pineal gland to synthesize melatonin, but birds have deep brain receptors and they are stimulated directly by light stimuli to have increased PT-TSH, without the need for melatonin. Photoperiodic regulations via TSH and DIO 2/3 also have a role in appetite, seasonal immune regulation, food intake and nest-making behaviour in animals. Since humans have no clear seasonal breeding period, such studies as recent ''domestication locus'' studies in poultry are interesting. PT-TSH that works like a neurotransmitter in the brain may become an important target for future studies about humans. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: melatonin; pars distalis; pars tuberalis; pars tuberalis thyrotropin; photoperiodism; pineal gland; pituitary; thyrotropin
Year: 2021 PMID: 33488871 PMCID: PMC7811323 DOI: 10.5114/aoms/102476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Med Sci ISSN: 1734-1922 Impact factor: 3.318
Figure 1PT-TSH and PD-TSH and actions. PD-TSH stimulates the thyroid gland and is regulated by TRH and negative feedback of thyroid hormones, in accordance with classical endocrinology knowledge. PT-TSH does not have a significant peripheral role but mainly acts on the hypothalamus, causing seasonal changes. The action of PT-TSH needs melatonin in mammals, but PT-TSH secretion is directly activated by light affecting deep brain receptors in birds without a melatonin signal (adapted and modified from [11])
Figure 2Deiodinases. Deiodinases in brain tissue regulate active thyroid hormone levels and related hypothalamic effects. DIO-2 enzyme increases T3 production and intracerebroventricular T3 induces testicular development in LD-breeder animals. Photoperiodic switching of DIO-2 to DIO-3 precedes gonadotropin changes in mammals and birds (see [38])