Author:
Sernia Conrad,Zeng Tang,Gemmell Robert T.
Abstract
Newborn marsupials do not have a thyroid gland at birth. The gland develops
while the young marsupial is in the mother’s pouch. The young brushtail
possum initiates secretion of thyroid hormones from its own thyroid at about
Day 65 post partum. However, during the first three
weeks of pouch life thyroxine is passed from the mother to the young via the
milk. To determine if this maternal thyroxine can effect organ development in
the young possum before it initiates secretion of thyroxine from its own
thyroid, the ontogeny of thyroid hormone receptors was determined in nuclear
extracts of lung, liver and kidney by radioreceptor assay,
using125I-labelled tri-iodothyronine as ligand. Receptor
density was calculated for tissues removed from young possums at Days 25
(n = 5), 50 (n = 4),
100 (n = 3) and 150 (n
= 4) and from adults (n = 5). Receptors
were found in possums of all age groups, including the small 25-day pouch
young. Significant differences were not found in the receptor density between
different tissues or at various ages. The association constant
Ka (4 ·0 ± 2·
6 L nmol-1 for lung) was similar in different tissues
and at the various ages examined. The passage of thyroid hormones from the
mother to the developing marsupial via the milk may have a role in the slow
development of organ systems early in pouch life by acting on thyroid
receptors in the pouch young. However, the functional maturation of the
thyroid gland of the young possum, not an increase in receptors, appears to
coincide with the rapid increase in the rate of growth and development which
occurs in later pouch life.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
4 articles.
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