Expression pattern of thyroid hormone transporters in the postnatal mouse brain

For a comprehensive description of the tissue-specific thyroidal state under normal as well as under pathophysiological conditions it is of utmost importance to include thyroid hormone (TH) transporters in the analysis as well. The current knowledge of the cell-specific repertoire of TH transporters...

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Main Authors: Julia eMüller, Heike eHeuer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Endocrinology
Subjects:
T3
T4
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fendo.2014.00092/full
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spelling doaj-bd1a593c279d4a67ae8b1f898ce6e6e72020-11-24T21:28:14ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Endocrinology1664-23922014-06-01510.3389/fendo.2014.0009299498Expression pattern of thyroid hormone transporters in the postnatal mouse brainJulia eMüller0Heike eHeuer1Heike eHeuer2Leibniz Institute for Age Research/Fritz Lipmann InstituteLeibniz Institute for Age Research/Fritz Lipmann InstituteLeibniz Research Institute for Environmental MedicineFor a comprehensive description of the tissue-specific thyroidal state under normal as well as under pathophysiological conditions it is of utmost importance to include thyroid hormone (TH) transporters in the analysis as well. The current knowledge of the cell-specific repertoire of TH transporters, however, is still rather limited, although several TH transporting proteins have been identified. Here, we describe the temporal and spatial distribution pattern of the most prominent TH transporters in the postnatal mouse brain. For that purpose, we performed radioactive in situ hybridization studies in order to analyze the cellular mRNA expression pattern of the monocarboxylate transporters Mct8 and Mct10, the L-type amino acid transporters Lat1 and Lat2 as well as the organic anion transporting peptide Oatp1c1 at different postnatal time points. Highest TH transporter expression levels in the CNS were observed at postnatal day 6 and 12, while hybridization signal intensities visibly declined after the second postnatal week. The only exception was Mct10 for which the strongest signals could be observed in white matter regions at postnatal day 21 indicating that this transporter is preferentially expressed in mature oligodendrocytes. Whereas Mct8 and Lat2 showed an overlapping neuronal mRNA expression pattern in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus and in the hypothalamus, Oatp1c1 and Lat1 specific signals were most prominent in capillary endothelial cells throughout the CNS. In the choroid plexus, expression of three transporters (Mct8, Lat2 and Oatp1c1) could be detected, whereas in other brain areas (e.g. striatum, thalamus, brain stem nuclei) only one of the transporter candidates appeared to be present. Overall, our study revealed a distinct mRNA distribution pattern for each of the TH transporter candidates. Further studies will reveal to which extent these transporters contribute to the cell-specific TH uptake and efflux in the mouse CNS.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fendo.2014.00092/fullLAT1T3T4Mct8Mct10Oatp1c1
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julia eMüller
Heike eHeuer
Heike eHeuer
spellingShingle Julia eMüller
Heike eHeuer
Heike eHeuer
Expression pattern of thyroid hormone transporters in the postnatal mouse brain
Frontiers in Endocrinology
LAT1
T3
T4
Mct8
Mct10
Oatp1c1
author_facet Julia eMüller
Heike eHeuer
Heike eHeuer
author_sort Julia eMüller
title Expression pattern of thyroid hormone transporters in the postnatal mouse brain
title_short Expression pattern of thyroid hormone transporters in the postnatal mouse brain
title_full Expression pattern of thyroid hormone transporters in the postnatal mouse brain
title_fullStr Expression pattern of thyroid hormone transporters in the postnatal mouse brain
title_full_unstemmed Expression pattern of thyroid hormone transporters in the postnatal mouse brain
title_sort expression pattern of thyroid hormone transporters in the postnatal mouse brain
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Endocrinology
issn 1664-2392
publishDate 2014-06-01
description For a comprehensive description of the tissue-specific thyroidal state under normal as well as under pathophysiological conditions it is of utmost importance to include thyroid hormone (TH) transporters in the analysis as well. The current knowledge of the cell-specific repertoire of TH transporters, however, is still rather limited, although several TH transporting proteins have been identified. Here, we describe the temporal and spatial distribution pattern of the most prominent TH transporters in the postnatal mouse brain. For that purpose, we performed radioactive in situ hybridization studies in order to analyze the cellular mRNA expression pattern of the monocarboxylate transporters Mct8 and Mct10, the L-type amino acid transporters Lat1 and Lat2 as well as the organic anion transporting peptide Oatp1c1 at different postnatal time points. Highest TH transporter expression levels in the CNS were observed at postnatal day 6 and 12, while hybridization signal intensities visibly declined after the second postnatal week. The only exception was Mct10 for which the strongest signals could be observed in white matter regions at postnatal day 21 indicating that this transporter is preferentially expressed in mature oligodendrocytes. Whereas Mct8 and Lat2 showed an overlapping neuronal mRNA expression pattern in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus and in the hypothalamus, Oatp1c1 and Lat1 specific signals were most prominent in capillary endothelial cells throughout the CNS. In the choroid plexus, expression of three transporters (Mct8, Lat2 and Oatp1c1) could be detected, whereas in other brain areas (e.g. striatum, thalamus, brain stem nuclei) only one of the transporter candidates appeared to be present. Overall, our study revealed a distinct mRNA distribution pattern for each of the TH transporter candidates. Further studies will reveal to which extent these transporters contribute to the cell-specific TH uptake and efflux in the mouse CNS.
topic LAT1
T3
T4
Mct8
Mct10
Oatp1c1
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fendo.2014.00092/full
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