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Are the Effects of T3 on Resting Metabolic Rate in Euthyroid Rats Entirely Caused by T3 Itself?

81

Citations

40

References

2002

Year

Abstract

Because we previously reported that T3 and 3,5-diiodo-L-thyronine (3,5-T2) both increase resting metabolic rate (RMR), 3,5-T2 could be another thyroidal regulator of energy metabolism. This effect of 3,5-T2 is evident in rats made hypothyroid by propylthiouracil and iopanoic acid, not in normal euthyroid (N) rats. Possibly, under euthyroid conditions, active 3,5-T2 may need to be formed intracellularly from a precursor such as T3. We tested this hypothesis by giving a single injection of T3 to N rats and comparing the time course of the variations in RMR with those of the changes in the serum and hepatic levels of 3,5-T2. Acute injection had an evident effect on RMR, 25 h earlier, in N rats than in rats made hypothyroid by propylthiouracil and iopanoic acid, maximal values (+40%) being reached in the former at 24-26 h. In N rats, the simultaneous injection of actinomycin D with the T3 inhibited the late part of the effect (after 24 h) more strongly than the early part (14-24 h). In serum and liver, 3,5-T2 levels were increased significantly at 12-24 h after T3 injection into N rats, a time at which RMR was rising rapidly to peak. These results seem to indicate that when T3 is injected into N animals, not all the effects on RMR are attributable to T3 itself, the early effect presumably being largely because of its in vivo deiodination to 3,5-T2. Because the effects of T3 and 3,5-T2 are additive, in N rats, the two iodothyronines probably cooperate in vivo to determine the total metabolic rate.

References

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