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Am J Physiol Cell Physiol (March 5, 2008). doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00328.2007
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Submitted on July 27, 2007
Accepted on March 3, 2008

H9c2 cardiomyoblasts produce thyroid hormone

Christof Meischl1*, Henk Buermans2, Thierry Hazes, Marian Zuidwijk, Rene J Musters3, Christa Boer4, Arthur van Lingen, Warner S Simonides5, Marius Blankenstein6, Corrine Dupuy, Walter Paulus7, C. Erik Hack, Carrie Ris-Stalpers8, Dirk Roos9, and Hans WM Niessen10

1 Pathology, VUmc, Amsterdam, Netherlands
2 Physiology, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands
3 Laboratory for Physiology, ICaR, VU Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
4 Laboratory for Physiology/Department of Anesthesiology, Institute for Cardiovascular Research Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam, Netherlands
5 Physiology, VU medical center, Amsterdam, Netherlands
6 Department of Clinical Chemistry, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, Netherlands
7 Dept of Cardiology, O.L.V. Ziekenhuis, Aalst, Belgium
8 pediatric endocrinology, AMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands
9 Blood Cell Research, Sanquin Research, United States; Blood Cell Research, Sanquin Research
10 Pathology, VUMC, Amsterdam, Netherlands

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: c.meischl{at}vumc.nl.

Thyroid hormone acts on a wide range of tissues. In the cardiovascular system, thyroid hormone is an important regulator of cardiac function and cardiovascular hemodynamics. Although some early reports in the literature suggested an unknown extrathyroidal source of thyroid hormone, it is currently thought to be produced exclusively in the thyroid gland, a highly specialized organ with the sole function of generating, storing and secreting thyroid hormone. While most of the proteins necessary for thyroid-hormone synthesis are thought to be expressed exclusively in the thyroid gland, we now have found evidence that all of these proteins, i.e. thyroglobulin, DUOX1, DUOX2, the sodium-iodide symporter, pendrin, thyroid peroxidase and thyroid-stimulating-hormone receptor, are also expressed in cardiomyocytes. Furthermore, we found thyroglobulin to be transiently upregulated in an in-vitro model of ischemia. When performing these experiments in the presence of 125I we found that 125I was integrated into thyroglobulin and that under ischemia-like conditions the radioactive signal in thyroglobulin was reduced. Concomitantly we observed an increase of intracellularly produced, 125I-labeled thyroid hormone. In conclusion, our findings demonstrate for the first time that cardiomyocytes produce thyroid hormone in a manner adapted to the cell's environment.







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