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CONVERSION OF THYROXINE TO 3-5-3′-TRIIODOTHYRONINE<i>IN VIVO</i>*
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1955
Year
Bioorganic ChemistryPathologyBiosynthesisNormal RatIodine Deficiency DisordersClinical ChemistryHuman MetabolismThyroid PhysiologyBiochemistryBasal Metabolic RateEndocrinologyNatural SciencesPhysiologyThyroid DiseaseProtein-bound IodineThyroid DisordersThyroid HormoneMetabolismMedicine
THE principal iodinated compound of the blood is thyroxine (1, 2, 3). In addition, small amounts of triiodothyronine have been found in the blood of clinically euthyroid subjects and of patients with hyperthyroidism (4). Both thyroxine and triiodothyronine have been identified in the normal rat and ox thyroid gland (5). However, it has not been shown whether the triiodothyronine which is present in the peripheral blood is secreted directly by the thyroid gland, or whether it is derived from degradation of previously secreted thyroxine. The present study demonstrates that triiodothyronine can be formed in the human subject from thyroxine in the absence of the thyroid gland, and confirms in man the finding of Gross and Leblond (6) that “unknown 1” (later shown to be triiodothyronine) can be formed in certain peripheral tissues in the thyroidectomized animal. Six patients with typical athyreotic myxedema were chosen. The diagnosis in each case was proved by measurements of basal metabolic rate and of serum concentration of protein-bound iodine (0.0 to 1.3 μg. per 100 ml.). Five patients were then given thyroxine in doses varying from 50 to 300 micrograms daily.