research
Role of cellular transport systems in the regulation of thyroid hormone bioavailability
- Publication date
- 21 November 1991
- Publisher
- In this thesis the relevance of the plasma and plasmamembrane transport of thyroid
hormone in its activation and metabolism is described. All early studies in our
laboratory on transport of thyroid hormone over the plasma membrane were performed
with rat hepatocytes in primary culture, with a medium containing only 0.5 or 1%
albumin, in fact in no way comparable with plasma or interstitial fluid, the physiological
medium. Plasma contains three thyroid hormone binding proteins, which bind more
than 99.97% of the circulating T4. About 75% of this T4 is bound to thyroxine binding
globulin, 15% to thyroxine binding prealbumin and 10% to albumin. Because there
existed (and still exists) a controversy in literature whether different concentrations of
binding proteins influence uptake of hormone into tissue cells, we have tried to resolve
this problem by comparing the results of tracer kinetic studies in subjects with an autosomal dominant inherited elevated binding of T4 to serum proteins with similar
data obtained in normals. In chapter ill it was shown that a strongly elevated binding
of T 4 in serum does not lead to a change in free hormone concentration or a change
in disposal rate of T4, which fmding makes a role of these binding proteins in the
tissue uptake of thyroid hormone unlikely. Furthermore, it was shown that this
biochemical syndrome, originally described by us, is caused by albumin with high affinity
for T 4, and that this albumin is also present in low concentrations in normals. In later
studies in the literature this syndrome is known as "familial dysalbuminemic
hyperthyroxinemia" (FDH).