RRC ID 71561
Author Zhang X, Malik B, Young C, Zhang H, Larkin D, Liao XH, Refetoff S, Liu M, Arvan P.
Title Maintaining the thyroid gland in mutant thyroglobulin-induced hypothyroidism requires thyroid cell proliferation that must continue in adulthood.
Journal J Biol Chem
Abstract Congenital hypothyroidism with biallelic thyroglobulin mutation is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) storage disease. Many patients (and animal models) grow an enlarged thyroid (goiter), yet some do not. In adulthood, hypothyroid TGcog/cog mice (bearing a Tg-L2263P mutation) exhibit a large goiter, whereas adult WIC rats bearing the TGrdw/rdw mutation (Tg-G2298R) exhibit a hypoplastic thyroid. Homozygous TG mutation has been linked to thyroid cell death, and cytotoxicity of the Tg-G2298R protein was previously thought to explain the lack of goiter in WIC-TGrdw/rdw rats. However, recent studies revealed that TGcog/cog mice also exhibit widespread ER stress-mediated thyrocyte death, yet under continuous feedback stimulation thyroid cells proliferate in excess of their demise. Here, to examine the relative proteotoxicity of the Tg-G2298R protein, we've used CRISPR/Cas9 technology to generate homozygous TGrdw/rdw knock-in mice in a strain background identical to that of TGcog/cog mice. TGrdw/rdw mice exhibit similar phenotypes of defective Tg protein folding, thyroid histological abnormalities, hypothyroidism, and growth retardation. TGrdw/rdw mice do not show evidence of greater ER stress response or stress-mediated cell death than TGcog/cog mice, and both mouse models exhibit sustained thyrocyte proliferation, with comparable goiter growth. In contrast, in WIC-TGrdw/rdw rats, as a function of aging, the thyrocyte proliferation rate declines precipitously. We conclude that the mutant Tg-G2298R protein is not intrinsically more proteotoxic than Tg-L2263P; rather, aging-dependent differences in maintenance of cell proliferation is the limiting factor, which accounts for absence of goiter in adult WIC-TGrdw/rdw rats.
Volume 298(7)
Pages 102066
Published 2022-7-1
DOI 10.1016/j.jbc.2022.102066
PII S0021-9258(22)00506-3
PMID 35618019
PMC PMC9213252
MeSH Animals Cell Proliferation Goiter* / congenital Goiter* / genetics Goiter* / metabolism Hypothyroidism* / genetics Hypothyroidism* / metabolism Mice Rats Thyroglobulin* / genetics Thyroid Gland* / physiopathology
IF 4.238
Resource
Rats WIC-Tgrdw/Kts (StrainID=193)