Developmental thyroid hormone action on pro-opiomelanocortin-expressing cells programs hypothalamic BMPR1A depletion and brown fat activation

Author:

Wu Zhaofei1,Martinez M Elena1,DeMambro Victoria12,Francois Marie3,Hernandez Arturo124

Affiliation:

1. MaineHealth Institute for Research, Center for Molecular Medicine, MaineHealth , Scarborough, ME 04074 , USA

2. Graduate School of Biomedical Science and Engineering, University of Maine , Orono, ME 04469 , USA

3. Naomi Berrie Diabetes Center, Division of Molecular Genetics, Columbia University Irving Medical Center , New York, NY 10032 , USA

4. Department of Medicine, Tufts University School of Medicine , Boston, MA 02111 , USA

Abstract

AbstractThyroid hormone excess secondary to global type 3 deiodinase (DIO3) deficiency leads to increased locomotor activity and reduced adiposity, but also to concurrent alterations in parameters of the leptin–melanocortin system that would predict obesity. To distinguish the underlying contributions to the energy balance phenotype of DIO3 deficiency, we generated mice with thyroid hormone excess targeted to pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)-expressing cells via cell-specific DIO3 inactivation. These mice exhibit a male-specific phenotype of reduced hypothalamic Pomc expression, hyperphagia, and increased activity in brown adipose tissue, with adiposity and serum levels of leptin and thyroid hormones remained normal. These male mice also manifest a marked and widespread hypothalamic reduction in the expression of bone morphogenetic receptor 1a (BMPR1A), which has been shown to cause similar phenotypes when inactivated in POMC-expressing cells. Our results indicate that developmental overexposure to thyroid hormone in POMC-expressing cells programs energy balance mechanisms in a sexually dimorphic manner by suppressing adult hypothalamic BMPR1A expression.

Funder

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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