Effect of oxygen concentrations on sodium iodide symporter expression and iodide uptake and hCG expression in human choriocarcinoma BeWo cells

Author:

Li Huika12,Landers Kelly12,Patel Jatin13,Richard Kerry123,Mortimer Robin H.143

Affiliation:

1. Conjoint Endocrine Laboratory,

2. Queensland Pathology, Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Herston; and

3. The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia

4. Department of Endocrinology, and

Abstract

Normal human fetal development requires an adequate supply of thyroid hormone from conception. Until about 16 wk gestation this is supplied entirely by placental transfer of maternal hormone. Subsequently, the fetal thyroid synthesizes thyroid hormones, requiring a supply of maternal iodide. Trophoblast iodide transfer is mediated by the apical sodium iodide symporter (NIS). Placental oxygen levels are low in early pregnancy (∼1%), rising with placental vascularisation to a plateau of ∼8% at about 16 wk. Although the impact of these changing oxygen levels on placental implantation is well recognized, effects on trophoblast materno-fetal exchange are less understood. We investigated expression of the NIS regulator hCG, NIS mRNA expression, and I125uptake in choriocarcinoma BeWo cells (a model of the trophoblast) cultured in 1 and 8% oxygen and in room air (21% oxygen). Expression of NIS and hCG mRNA and protein was low at 1% oxygen but rose significantly at 8 and at 21%. This was reflected in significant increases in I125uptake. Desferrioxamine, an iron chelator and hypoxia mimic, decreased NIS and hCG expression and I125uptake in BeWo cells. NIS expression and I125uptake in cells grown at 1% oxygen were not increased by addition of hCG (2,500 IU/l). We infer that placental NIS mRNA and protein expression are regulated by oxygen, rising with vascularization of the placenta in the late first trimester, a time when fetal iodide requirements are increasing.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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