Thyroid Hormone Regulates the Expression of the Sonic Hedgehog Signaling Pathway in the Embryonic and Adult Mammalian Brain

Author:

Desouza Lynette A.1,Sathanoori Malini1,Kapoor Richa1,Rajadhyaksha Neha1,Gonzalez Luis E.2,Kottmann Andreas H.2,Tole Shubha1,Vaidya Vidita A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences (L.A.D., M.S., R.K., N.R., S.T., V.A.V.), Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai 400005, India;

2. Center for Motor Neuron Biology and Disease and Columbia Genome Center (L.E.G., A.H.K.), Columbia University, College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, New York 10032

Abstract

Thyroid hormone is important for development and plasticity in the immature and adult mammalian brain. Several thyroid hormone-responsive genes are regulated during specific developmental time windows, with relatively few influenced across the lifespan. We provide novel evidence that thyroid hormone regulates expression of the key developmental morphogen sonic hedgehog (Shh), and its coreceptors patched (Ptc) and smoothened (Smo), in the early embryonic and adult forebrain. Maternal hypo- and hyperthyroidism bidirectionally influenced Shh mRNA in embryonic forebrain signaling centers at stages before fetal thyroid hormone synthesis. Further, Smo and Ptc expression were significantly decreased in the forebrain of embryos derived from hypothyroid dams. Adult-onset thyroid hormone perturbations also regulated expression of the Shh pathway bidirectionally, with a significant induction of Shh, Ptc, and Smo after hyperthyroidism and a decline in Smo expression in the hypothyroid brain. Short-term T3 administration resulted in a significant induction of cortical Shh mRNA expression and also enhanced reporter gene expression in Shh+/LacZ mice. Further, acute T3 treatment of cortical neuronal cultures resulted in a rapid and significant increase in Shh mRNA, suggesting direct effects. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays performed on adult neocortex indicated enhanced histone acetylation at the Shh promoter after acute T3 administration, providing further support that Shh is a thyroid hormone-responsive gene. Our results indicate that maternal and adult-onset perturbations of euthyroid status cause robust and region-specific changes in the Shh pathway in the embryonic and adult forebrain, implicating Shh as a possible mechanistic link for specific neurodevelopmental effects of thyroid hormone.

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology

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