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The Journal of Neuroscience, March 15, 2000, 20(6):2255-2265
Acute Changes in Maternal Thyroid Hormone Induce Rapid and
Transient Changes in Gene Expression in Fetal Rat Brain
Amy L. S.
Dowling1,
Gabriel U.
Martz1,
Jack L.
Leonard2, and
R. Thomas
Zoeller1
1 Biology Department and Molecular and Cellular Biology
Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003, and 2 Molecular Endocrinology Laboratory, University
of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 01655
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ABSTRACT |
Despite clinical evidence that thyroid hormone is essential for
brain development before birth, effects of thyroid hormone on the fetal
brain have been largely unexplored. One mechanism of thyroid hormone
action is regulation of gene expression, because thyroid hormone
receptors (TRs) are ligand-activated transcription factors. We used
differential display to identify genes affected by acute T4
administration to the dam before the onset of fetal thyroid function.
Eight of the 11 genes that we identified were selectively expressed in
brain areas known to contain TRs, indicating that these genes were
directly regulated by thyroid hormone. Using in situ
hybridization, we confirmed that the cortical expression of both
neuroendocrine-specific protein (NSP) and Oct-1 was affected by
changes in maternal thyroid status. Additionally, we demonstrated that
both NSP and Oct-1 were expressed in the adult brain and that their
responsiveness to thyroid hormone was retained. These data are the
first to identify thyroid hormone-responsive genes in the fetal brain.
Key words:
thyroid hormone; neuroendocrine-specific protein; NSP; Oct-1; POU-domain; cerebral cortex; brain development; differential
display; congenital hypothyroidism
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INTRODUCTION |
It is well known that thyroid
hormone is essential for normal mammalian brain development
(Oppenheimer and Schwartz, 1997 ). However, until recently it was
generally believed that the effects of thyroid hormone on brain
development occur only after birth (Fisher, 1999 ). Several recent
clinical observations provide evidence to the contrary. First, thyroid
hormone of maternal origin crosses the placenta and reaches the fetus
(Vulsma et al., 1989 ; Contempre et al., 1993 ). In addition, the
receptors for thyroid hormone (TRs) are expressed in the fetal brain
before the onset of fetal thyroid function, and receptor occupancy is
within the range known to elicit physiological effects (Bernal and
Pekonen, 1984 ; Ferreiro et al., 1988 ). Second, iodine therapy prevents
neurological cretinism in regions of endemic goiter only if initiated
before the beginning of the third trimester (Cao et al., 1994 ).
Moreover, children born to pregnant women with untreated hypothyroidism
during the second trimester exhibit measurable neurological deficits
despite normal circulating thyroid hormone at birth (Haddow et al.,
1999 ; Pop et al., 1999 ). These findings strongly suggest that thyroid hormone, perhaps of maternal origin, plays important roles in brain
development before birth.
The present study was initiated to test the broad hypothesis that
thyroid hormone of maternal origin can exert direct effects on brain
development before birth. Our strategy for testing this hypothesis was
based on the recognition that thyroid hormone of maternal origin can
reach the rat fetus (Obregon et al., 1984 ; Porterfield and Hendrich,
1992 ) and that TRs are expressed in the fetal rat brain before the
onset of fetal thyroid function (Perez-Castillo et al., 1985 ; Bradley
et al., 1992 ; Falcone et al., 1994 ). Therefore, considering that TRs
are ligand-activated transcription factors (Lazar, 1993 , 1994 ;
Mangelsdorf and Evans, 1995 ), we predicted that thyroid hormone of
maternal origin can affect fetal brain development by regulating the
expression of specific genes.
The classes of genes regulated by thyroid hormone in the fetal brain
were difficult to predict because thyroid hormone is known to influence
many cellular and developmental processes in the postnatal brain
(Dussault and Ruel, 1987 ), and the classes of genes supporting these
processes may be widely varied. Therefore, we used the nonbiased method
of differential display (Liang and Pardee, 1992 ) to identify putative
thyroid hormone-responsive genes in the fetal cortex. To ensure that we
identified genes regulated by thyroid hormone of maternal origin, we
focused on the period of fetal development before the onset of fetal
thyroid function (Fisher et al., 1977 ).
We now report the identification of several putative thyroid
hormone-responsive genes that are selectively expressed in areas of the
fetal brain that also express TRs. In addition, we have further
characterized the response to thyroid hormone of two of these genes,
one encoding neuroendocrine-specific protein (NSP) and one encoding
Oct-1, in both the fetal and adult cortex.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals. All animal procedures were performed in
accordance with the National Institutes of Health Guidelines for animal
research and were approved by the University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
Experiment I: Identification of thyroid hormone-responsive genes
in the fetal cortex using differential display. Nulliparous female
Sprague Dawley rats (n = 10; Charles River, Wilmington, MA) were surgically thyroidectomized, provided with 0.1% calcium chloride in the drinking water (Zoeller et al., 1988 ), and maintained on normal rat chow. Two weeks after thyroidectomy, the females were
paired with males overnight; the presence of sperm in a vaginal smear
the following morning indicated mating, and this day was considered
gestational day (GD) 1. Dams were given subcutaneous injections of
either thyroxine [T4; 1.25 µg/100 gm body
weight (BW); Sigma, St. Louis, MO] or saline at 9 A.M. and 4 P.M. on GD15. At 9 A.M. on GD16, dams were decapitated, and
trunk blood was collected for measurement of serum
T4. Half of the fetuses from each litter were
frozen intact on pulverized dry ice and stored at 80°C.
Parasagittal sections of these GD16 fetuses were later collected for
in situ hybridization. The cortex was dissected from the
remaining fetuses, frozen on pulverized dry ice, and stored at 80°C
until extraction of RNA.
Total RNA was isolated from the cortex of one GD16 fetus obtained from
a dam with undetectable circulating total T4 and
from the cortex of one GD16 fetus from a dam with normal levels of total T4 (23.1 ng/ml). Total RNA was extracted
using an acid-phenol extraction procedure (Chomczynski and Sacchi,
1987 ). This RNA was subjected to reverse transcription (RT) and
amplified by RT-PCR according to the manufacturer's
instructions (RNAimage, GenHunter, Nashville, TN). The PCR products
amplified from each RNA pool using 16 primer pair combinations were
electrophoresed in adjacent lanes on a 6% denaturing polyacrylamide
gel. The gel was dried and apposed overnight to BioMax autoradiographic
film (Kodak, Rochester, NY). Gene fragments that on film appeared to be
either upregulated or downregulated by T4
injection were extracted from the gel, reamplified, and cloned into
pCRII (InVitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) or pBluescript KS (Stratagene, La
Jolla, CA) (Table 1). Sequencing was
performed using ABI FS-Dye-Terminator chemistry (PE Applied Biosystems,
Foster City, CA).
Experiment II: Verification of thyroid hormone-responsive genes
in the fetal brain. Nulliparous female Sprague Dawley rats (n = 44; Zivic Miller, Pottersville, PA) were exposed
to the goitrogen 2-mercapto-1-methylimidazole (MMI; Sigma;
n = 23) to block the synthesis of thyroid hormone. MMI
was dissolved to 0.02% in drinking water and provided fresh daily.
Controls (n = 21) were provided with unaltered drinking
water. After 2 weeks of MMI treatment, the females were mated as
described above. Both hypothyroid (MMI-treated) dams and euthyroid
controls (no MMI) were subdivided into five additional groups receiving
either no injection or a single subcutaneous injection of
T4 (1.25 µg/100 gm BW; Sigma) at either 9 A.M.
or 9 P.M. on either GD14 or GD15. These injections were therefore timed
to occur 48, 36, 24, or 12 hr before animals were killed at 9 A.M. on GD16. At 9 A.M. on GD16, all dams were decapitated, and trunk
blood was collected for measurement of serum T4
and thyrotropin (TSH). All fetuses were frozen intact as described above. Frontal sections through the cortex and thalamus of one fetus
from each dam were collected (Altman and Bayer, 1995 ).
After in situ hybridization, the signal was measured over
the cortex and thalamus of GD16 fetal brains using the thresholding function in which all pixels containing density values exceeding a
minimum value were averaged over the specified brain area. The resulting values were averaged over four sections for each fetus, with
one fetus per litter and four to five litters per treatment group. A
two-way ANOVA, with main effects of MMI treatment and timing of acute
T4 exposure, was followed by Bonferroni's
t test.
To confirm the in situ hybridization results, we performed
Northern analysis on RNA extracted from fetal cortex derived from dams
treated with either MMI alone or MMI plus T4. The
cortex was dissected from one GD16 fetus per litter, derived from
uninjected MMI-treated dams (n = 4) and MMI-treated
dams injected with T4 at 9 P.M. on GD14
(n = 5). RNA was extracted from these tissue pools as
described above. Four replicates of total RNA from each pool (20 µg
RNA per lane) were electrophoresed with RNA molecular weight standards
(Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) on a 1.2% agarose/6.5%
formaldehyde gel. RNA was transferred to a nylon Zeta-Probe membrane
(Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, CA) and cross-linked by baking.
Cyclophilin and NSP probes were generated by both random primer
labeling and nick translation in the presence of
32P-dCTP according to the manufacturer's
instructions (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN). Both types of
cyclophilin and NSP probes were mixed and hybridized simultaneously to
ensure adequate detection of the target mRNA. Membranes were briefly
prehybridized, hybridized at high stringency with
106 cpm probe/106 cpm probe/1
ml hybridization buffer, and washed according to manufacturer's
instructions. The membranes were then apposed to a storage phosphor
screen (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA), scanned into a Storm 840 Phosphorimager at 200 µm resolution, and evaluated with ImageQuant
(Molecular Dynamics). The density of each band was
quantified and normalized with respect to cyclophilin to control for
loading variations. Student's t test was used to compare
normalized band densities between the two RNA pools. In a separate
experiment, serial dilutions of total RNA demonstrated a linear
relationship between the amount of total RNA loaded and intensity of
the cyclophilin signal between 5 and 20 µg RNA (data not shown).
Experiment III: Developmental pattern of NSP and Oct-1 expression
in the brain. We initiated this study to define changes in NSP and
Oct-1 expression during development to ensure that the pattern of
expression observed in adults represents continuous expression from
embryonic life. Nulliparous female Sprague Dawley rats
(n = 6; Zivic Miller) were maintained on rat
chow and unaltered drinking water ad libitum and mated as
described above. Five dams (n = 1 per GD) were
decapitated at 12 P.M. on GD14, GD16, GD18, and GD21, and the fetuses
were collected and sectioned as described in Experiment II. The
remaining dam carried the pregnancy to term. The resulting pups
[n = 1 per postnatal day (PND)] were decapitated at
12 P.M. on PND3, -6, -9, -11, -14, and -19, and the intact heads (PND11
or earlier) or brains (PND14-PND19) were frozen on pulverized dry ice
and stored at 80°C. An adult male Sprague Dawley rat was used to
determine the expression pattern in the adult brain. Coronal sections
were collected through the brain at the level of the rostral dentate gyrus.
Experiment IV: Effect of thyroid hormone on NSP and Oct-1
expression in the adult brain. We tested whether NSP and Oct-1
expression is affected by thyroid status in adults because it allowed
us to test the thyroid hormone responsiveness of these genes in the absence of the maternal system and provided information about the
temporal window of sensitivity to thyroid hormone. We manipulated thyroid hormone status of adult male Sprague Dawley rats
(n = 23, 155-190 gm; Zivic Miller), as described by
Koller et al. (1987) . Each animal received a single intraperitoneal
injection of either saline or 6-(n-propyl)-2-thiouracil (PTU; 1 mg/100
gm BW; Sigma) (Dyess et al., 1988 ) to block both thyroid hormone
synthesis and the conversion of T4 to
triiodothyronine (T3) by type I 5'-deiodinase (Chopra, 1996 ; Leonard and Koehrle, 1996 ). PTU-treated animals (n = 12) were maintained for 12 d after PTU
treatment on 0.05% MMI in the drinking water, provided fresh daily,
and at 9 A.M. they received daily subcutaneous injections of either
T3 (10 µg/100 gm BW; Sigma; n = 6) or 100 µl saline/100 gm BW (n = 6). The remaining rats (n = 11, no PTU) were maintained on unaltered
drinking water and at 9 A.M. received daily subcutaneous injections of
either 10 µg T3/100 gm BW (n = 6) or 100 µl saline/100 gm BW (n = 5).
After treatment, animals were decapitated at 1 P.M., and trunk blood
was collected for measurement of serum total T3,
total T4, and TSH. Additionally, the relative
abundance of the mRNA encoding thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) was
measured in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN). Brains were
collected and immediately frozen as described above. Coronal sections
were collected through the brain at the level of the PVN (Paxinos and Watson, 1986 , their Fig. 25) and through the cortex and hippocampus at
the transition from the frontal cortex to the occipital cortex (Paxinos
and Watson, 1986 , their Figs. 31-33). Sagittal sections were collected
through the cerebellum (Paxinos and Watson, 1986 , their Fig. 79).
After in situ hybridization, the signal was measured over
the PVN (only for TRH), cortex, dentate gyrus, CA1, CA2, CA3, and cerebellum. Signals in the cortex and hippocampus were measured without
using thresholding, whereas measurements in the PVN and cerebellum were
obtained using thresholding as described above. These values were
averaged over four sections for each brain region, with five to six
animals per treatment group. A two-way ANOVA, with main effects of MMI
treatment and T3 injection, was followed by
Bonferroni's t test.
Radioimmunoassay. Total T4 was
measured according to the manufacturer's instructions using a
T4 RIA kit (ICN, Costa Mesa, CA). This assay was
performed at 40% binding with detection limits of 10-200 ng/ml and an
intra-assay variation of 3.5%. Total T3 was
measured according to the manufacturer's instructions using a
T3 radioimmunoassay (RIA) kit (ICN). This assay
was performed at 49% binding with detection limits of 0.25-8 ng/ml
and an intra-assay variation of 4.4%. Serum levels of TSH were
measured using 125I-rat TSH (Covance
Laboratories, Vienna, VA) and the double antibody National Institute of
Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases RIA reagents
including RP-3 standards. This assay was performed at 25% binding with
detection limits of 1-50 ng/ml and an intra-assay variation of
8.0%.
In situ hybridization. In all experiments, frozen
tissues were sectioned at 12 µm in a cryostat (Reichert-Jung Frigocut
2800N). Sections were thaw-mounted onto gelatin-coated microscope
slides and stored at 80°C until hybridization. In situ
hybridization was performed as described previously (Scott et al.,
1998 ), with two exceptions. First, the hybridization buffer also
contained 0.1% sodium pyrophosphate. Second, the hybridization buffer
contained 200 mM dithiothreitol rather than
50 mM.
Probes. cRNA probes were generated from cDNA constructs
described in Table 2. Transcription
reactions were performed in the presence of
33P- UTP (Andotek, Irvine, CA), as
described previously (Scott et al., 1998 ). In each case, the total
concentration of UTP was held to 12 µM, including 6 µM 33P- UTP.
Autoradiography and signal quantitation. Slides were
arranged in x-ray cassettes and apposed to BioMax film (Kodak), where the duration of exposure was dependent on the specific activity of the
probe and the abundance of the target message.
14C standards (American Radiolabeled
Chemicals, St. Louis, MO) were simultaneously apposed to the film to
verify that the film was not overexposed. Hybridization signal was
analyzed as described previously (Scott et al., 1998 ) using a
PowerCenter 150 Macintosh computer and the public domain NIH Image
program (W. Rasband, National Institute of Mental Health). This system
was interfaced with a Dage-MTI 72 series video camera equipped with a
Nikon macro lens mounted onto a bellows system over a light box.
Statistical analysis. Outliers, defined as those values
exceeding 1.5 interquartile ranges from the upper and lower quartiles, were eliminated using a box and whisker plot (Statistix, Analytical Software, Tallahassee, FL). A two-way ANOVA (Systat, Systat, Inc., Evanston, IL) was performed on the remaining values, with main effects
described in the specific experiment. Post hoc tests of differences among individual means were performed using a Bonferroni's t test, in which the mean squared error term from the ANOVA
table was used as a point estimate of the pooled variance.
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RESULTS |
Experiment I: Identification of thyroid hormone-responsive genes in
the GD16 cortex
We manipulated maternal thyroid status before the onset of fetal
thyroid function to ensure that maternal T4 was
the sole source of thyroid hormone to the fetus. Using differential
display, we identified 11 putative thyroid hormone-responsive genes in the fetal cortex generated from eight RNAimage primer combinations (Table 1). Seven of these genes appeared to be enhanced by
T4, and four appeared to be suppressed by
T4. Before sequencing these gene fragments, we
performed in situ hybridization to determine whether their
expression pattern overlapped with that of TR 1 or TR 1. Among the
original 11 genes, we found that eight exhibited anatomical patterns of
expression overlapping with that of TR 1 or TR 1 (Fig.
1), indicating that they may be directly
regulated by thyroid hormone. We chose to further evaluate three of
these genes, two whose sequences matched entries in GenBank (Table 1). Fragment 2A was identical to NSP (Wieczorek and Hughes, 1991 ; van de
Velde et al., 1994b ; Baka et al., 1996 ) and was suppressed by
T4; fragment 18C was identical to Oct-1 (J. N. Buskin, unpublished observations) and was enhanced by
T4; and fragment 6C did not match the
sequence of any GenBank entry and was suppressed by T4.

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Figure 1.
Distribution of putative thyroid
hormone-responsive genes in the GD16 embryo. Images are derived from
film autoradiograms after in situ hybridization to
determine whether putative thyroid hormone-responsive mRNAs identified
by differential display RT-PCR were expressed in areas known to contain
TR mRNAs (Experiment I). RNA probes were applied to sagittal sections
of GD16 rat embryos. Sense controls were applied to adjacent sections
and produced negligible hybridization signal (data not shown), with the
exception of fragment 17C, which we did not examine further.
A, Distribution of TR 1 and TR 1 mRNA.
B, Distribution of putative thyroid hormone-responsive
mRNAs as noted above panel. Film autoradiograms of gene fragments
identified by differential display are shown in insets,
illustrating direction of thyroid hormone effects. See Table 1 for
RNAimage primers used to generate each fragment. Cx,
Cortex; H, hippocampus; L, liver;
M, medulla; Mb, midbrain;
R, retina; S, saline-injected;
SC, spinal cord; T,
T4-injected; TG, trigeminal ganglion;
Th, thalamus. Scale bar, 0.5 cm.
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Experiment II: Verification of maternal thyroid hormone effects on
the expression of NSP, Oct-1, and 6C
We confirmed the efficacy of our thyroid hormone manipulation of
pregnant female rats by measuring maternal serum total
T4 and TSH (Fig.
2). Treatment with the goitrogen MMI
significantly reduced circulating levels of maternal
T4 (F(1,34) = 59.957; p < 0.001) and significantly elevated serum
TSH (F(1,30) = 50.983; p < 0.001). Treatment with thyroid hormone
significantly elevated maternal serum T4
(F(4,34) = 11.776; p < 0.001) (Fig. 2). A single injection of 1.25 µg
T4/100 gm BW transiently restored circulating T4 to physiological levels and transiently
suppressed TSH levels in hypothyroid dams, as predicted. However,
physiological levels of T4 were restored only 12 hr after T4 injection in hypothyroid dams, but
remained elevated in euthyroid dams for at least 24 hr (Fig. 2).
Likewise, TSH suppression was evident for a shorter duration in
hypothyroid dams. These data are consistent with previous work showing
that thyroid hormone is cleared from the serum of hypothyroid dams more
rapidly than from that of euthyroid dams (Versloot et al., 1998 ).

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Figure 2.
Effect of MMI and T4 injections on
serum levels of T4 (A) and TSH
(B) in GD16 pregnant females at the time they
were decapitated (Experiment II). See Materials and Methods for details
of thyroid hormone manipulation. Bars represent mean ± SEM, with
number of dams per group noted within each bar. All animals were killed
at 9 A.M. (0900) on GD16. Groups differed in the timing
of T4 injection as shown below the ordinate. Open
bars, Euthyroid dams (no MMI); closed bars,
hypothyroid dams (MMI). a Significantly different from
euthyroid dams receiving no injection (p < 0.05). b Significantly different from hypothyroid dams
receiving no injection (p < 0.05).
c Significantly different from hypothyroid dams with
identical timing of acute T4 treatment
(p < 0.05). Note: Serum hormone levels
below detection limit were assigned the value of the detection limit
(indicated by dashed line) for statistical
purposes.
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We measured the effects of maternal thyroid hormone manipulation on
gene expression in the fetal brain using in situ
hybridization because this approach allowed us to evaluate the
potential site-specific effects of thyroid hormone on NSP, Oct-1, and
6C expression. Quantitative analysis of film autoradiograms after
in situ hybridization revealed that both MMI
(F(1,31) = 9.851; p < 0.004) and maternal thyroid hormone
(F(4,31)=5.146; p < 0.003)
significantly affected NSP expression in the GD16 cortex (Fig.
3). Maternal thyroid hormone exposure
significantly decreased NSP mRNA in the cortex of hypothyroid animals
36 hr after T4 injection (9 P.M. on GD14). In
contrast, thyroid hormone exposure significantly increased Oct-1 mRNA
in the cortex of euthyroid animals 12 and 24 hr after
T4 injection (9 P.M. and 9 A.M., respectively, on
GD15). These results are consistent with those of the original
differential display where NSP expression was decreased by maternal
thyroid hormone and Oct-1 expression was increased by maternal thyroid
hormone. The expression of neither NSP nor Oct-1 was affected by
thyroid hormone in the thalamus (data not shown). Additionally, 6C was
not affected by thyroid hormone in either the cortex or the thalamus,
suggesting that it was falsely identified as being thyroid hormone
responsive in the differential display.

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Figure 3.
Effect of thyroid hormone manipulation on gene
expression in the GD16 fetus (Experiment II). Quantitative analysis of
film autoradiograms after in situ hybridization for NSP,
Oct-1, and 6C are described in Materials and Methods. Bars represent
mean ± SEM of the film density (converted to % controls ± CV) over the cortex, with number of dams per group noted within each
bar. All animals were killed at 9 A.M. (0900) on GD16.
Groups differed in the timing of T4 injection as shown
below the ordinate. Open bars, Euthyroid dams (no MMI);
closed bars, hypothyroid dams (MMI).
a Significantly different from hypothyroid dams receiving
no injection (p < 0.05).
b Significantly different from hypothyroid dams with
identical timing of acute T4 treatment
(p < 0.05).
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Previous work has shown that two mRNAs are transcribed from the NSP
gene, a 1.5 kb transcript (NSP-C) and a 3.5 kb transcript (NSP-A)
(Ninkina et al., 1997 ; Roebroek et al., 1998 ). Because these
transcripts have a common 3' end identical to the NSP fragment amplified in the original differential display, our in situ
hybridization probe hybridized to both transcripts. Therefore, we
performed Northern analysis to determine whether both NSP transcripts
are affected by maternal thyroid hormone. Northern analysis revealed that our probe hybridized to the predicted 1.5 and 3.5 kb transcripts (Fig. 4A). Expression
of the 3.5 kb NSP-A transcript was significantly decreased (30.7 ± 13.0%) in fetuses derived from hypothyroid dams treated with
T4 (Fig. 4B). In contrast,
expression of the 1.5 kb NSP-C transcript was unaffected by acute
maternal thyroid hormone manipulation.

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Figure 4.
Effect of thyroid hormone manipulation on
the expression of NSP variants using quantitative Northern analysis
(Experiment II). A, Phosphor-image of Northern blot
in which 20 µg total RNA was hybridized with 32P-labeled
NSP cDNA. 32P-labeled cyclophilin cDNA was hybridized
simultaneously to control for loading variations. RNA was isolated from
GD16 fetuses derived from hypothyroid dams receiving either no
injection ( ) or a single T4 injection at 9 P.M. on GD14
(+). Each sample corresponds to RNA pooled from four or five animals.
Positions of the molecular weight standards and the 18S and 28S
ribosomal RNAs are indicated. B, Quantification of
band density shown in A using ImageQuant software. NSP-A
mRNA was decreased after acute maternal T4 exposure. Bars
represent mean band density ± SEM (converted to % total
cyclophilin). a Transcript of 3.5 kb hybridized to NSP
probe, corresponding to NSP-A. b Transcript of 3.4 kb
hybridized to cyclophilin probe. c Transcript of 1.5 kb
hybridized to NSP probe, corresponding to NSP-C.
d Transcript of 0.9 kb hybridized to cyclophilin probe.
*Significantly different from hypothyroid dams receiving no injection
(p < 0.05).
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Experiment III: Developmental pattern of NSP and
Oct-1 expression
After the initial observation that both NSP and Oct-1 were
regulated by thyroid hormone in the GD16 cortex, we characterized the
distribution and relative abundance of these mRNAs during development.
We found that NSP expression was restricted to the nervous system at
all times (Fig. 5). NSP mRNA was clearly
detectable at GD14, the earliest developmental time evaluated. NSP
expression was more robust in the intermediate zone of the cortex than
in the ventricular zone [nomenclature derived from Boulder Committee (1970) ]. Additionally, NSP mRNA was more abundant during the fetal and
neonatal period but became less abundant from approximately PND14
through adulthood. Regional differences in NSP expression were apparent
throughout brain development. For example, NSP expression was
predominant in the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus beginning around
the time of birth and persisting into adulthood. The hippocampus, medial habenular nucleus, and amygdala were also intensely labeled. The
corpus callosum and other myelinated fiber bundles were never labeled.

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Figure 5.
Developmental profile of NSP expression in
the rat. Images are derived from film autoradiograms after in
situ hybridization using the NSP cRNA probe (Experiment III).
Age is noted in the top left corner of each panel.
Cx, Cortex; H, hippocampus;
Th, thalamus; VMH, ventromedial
hypothalamus. Scale bar, 0.5 cm.
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Oct-1 mRNA was expressed both within the brain and outside the nervous
system (Fig. 6). Oct-1 expression was
predominant in the ventricular zone of the cortex of fetal brains.
Regional differences in Oct-1 expression levels were apparent
throughout brain development. For example, Oct-1 expression was
abundantly expressed in the thalamus from approximately GD16 until
PND14. As development proceeded, Oct-1 expression became less robust
and more spatially restricted, although expression was retained in the
hippocampus.

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Figure 6.
Developmental profile of Oct-1 expression
in the rat. Images are derived from film autoradiograms after in
situ hybridization using the Oct-1 cRNA probe (Experiment III).
Age is noted in the top left corner of each panel.
Cx, Cortex; H, hippocampus;
Th, thalamus; Hb, habenula. Scale bar,
0.5 cm.
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Experiment IV: Effect of thyroid hormone on NSP and Oct-1
expression in the adult brain
The developmental study demonstrated that NSP and Oct-1 were
continually expressed in the cortex from fetal life to adulthood. Therefore, we evaluated the effect of thyroid status on the expression of these genes in the adult brain to determine whether these genes retained their responsiveness to thyroid hormone. We confirmed the
efficacy of our thyroid hormone manipulations of adult male rats by
measuring serum T3, T4, and
TSH and by measuring TRH mRNA in the PVN of the hypothalamus, which is
known to be suppressed by thyroid hormone (Koller et al., 1987 ).
Treatment with PTU and MMI significantly reduced circulating levels of
T4 (F(1,18) = 2349.446; p < 0.001), elevated serum TSH
(F(1,17) = 14.075; p < 0.002), and elevated TRH mRNA in the PVN
(F(1,19) = 10.845; p < 0.004) (Table 3). Daily
T3 injections significantly reduced circulating
levels of T4
(F(1,18) = 2349.446; p < 0.001), elevated T3
(F(1,19) = 91.169; p < 0.001), and suppressed TRH mRNA in the PVN
(F(1,19) = 125.763; p < 0.001), consistent with negative feedback of thyroid hormone on the
pituitary and hypothalamus (Koller et al., 1987 ; Dyess et al., 1988 ;
Zoeller et al., 1988 ).
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Table 3.
Serum levels of total T3, total T4,
and TSH, and expression levels of TRH mRNA in the PVN of adult thyroid
hormone-manipulated animals (Experiment IV)
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Combined PTU and MMI treatment significantly elevated NSP mRNA in the
dentate gyrus (F(1,17) = 6.719;
p < 0.02) and CA1 subfield of Ammon's horn
(F(1,18) = 4.777; p < 0.05) (Table 4). Additionally, T3 treatment significantly decreased NSP mRNA in
the dentate gyrus (F(1,17) = 6.682;
p < 0.02). NSP mRNA levels in the cortex, CA2, and CA3
subfields, and cerebellum were unaffected by treatments. In contrast,
T3 treatment significantly reduced Oct-1 mRNA in the cortex (F(1,19) = 19.362;
p < 0.001), dentate gyrus
(F(1,19) = 15.843; p < 0.001), CA2 (F(1,17) = 19.147;
p < 0.001), and CA3 (F(1,19) = 23.189; p < 0.001) (Table 4). Oct-1 mRNA levels in the CA1 subfield and
cerebellum were unaffected by treatments.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The present studies are the first to demonstrate that thyroid
hormone can affect gene expression in the fetal rat brain. Moreover, because we manipulated thyroid status of pregnant rats before the onset
of fetal thyroid function, our data clearly demonstrate that thyroid
hormone specifically of maternal origin affects the expression of these
genes. Considering recent observations that maternal thyroid hormone
reaches the fetus (Vulsma et al., 1989 ; Contempre et al., 1993 ) and
that children born to pregnant women with untreated hypothyroidism
exhibit measurable neurological deficits (Haddow et al., 1999 ; Pop et
al., 1999 ), our data strongly indicate that thyroid hormone of maternal
origin affects fetal brain development by regulating the expression of
specific genes.
Using differential display, we identified 11 putative thyroid
hormone-responsive genes in the fetal brain using only eight primer
pairs. Thus, a large number of genes expressed in the fetal brain may
be affected by maternal thyroid hormone. Differential display is known
to generate false-positives, as do other "subtractive" hybridization methods designed to identify differentially expressed genes (Wan and Erlander, 1997 ; Ledakis et al., 1998 ). However, only one
of three genes chosen for further analysis was a false-positive. This
success rate may have been caused in part by the anatomical screen used
to determine whether genes identified by differential display were
expressed in brain areas containing TRs. Although nearly all of the
gene fragments generated from the differential display were selectively
expressed in brain areas and in organs that are responsive to thyroid
hormone (Fig. 1), the genes chosen for further analysis were the most
abundant and selectively expressed in TR-containing brain regions.
In principle, thyroid hormone of maternal origin could affect the
expression of genes in the fetal brain by a direct action or by various
indirect actions. However, several features of the present results
suggest that maternal thyroid hormone affects gene expression by a
direct action. First, the dose of thyroid hormone given to the dam did
not produce supraphysiological levels of T4 in
maternal blood. Therefore, the observed effects were not caused by
thyrotoxic effects of thyroid hormone. Second, the single injection of
T4 produced rapid, transient, and selective effects on gene expression in the fetal brain. The abundance of the NSP
mRNA was suppressed within 36 hr, whereas that of Oct-1 mRNA was
elevated within 12 hr. These effects were observed only in the cortex,
not in the thalamus, and 6C was unaffected in both brain regions. In
contrast, nonspecific or metabolic effects of thyroid hormone would
more likely produce similar effects on the abundance of various genes
and would not likely be limited to specific brain regions. Finally, we
clearly demonstrated that NSP and Oct-1 expression can be regulated by
T3 in the adult brain. Therefore, the effects of
thyroid hormone on the expression of these two genes is not dependent
on the maternal system or on injecting T4. Taken
together, these data provide strong support for the concept that
thyroid hormone of maternal origin can directly affect the expression
of genes in the fetal brain.
Considering the evidence that thyroid hormone exerts a direct action on
the expression of NSP and Oct-1, it was surprising that the
administration of MMI did not affect their expression in the fetal
brain, as measured by in situ hybridization. In the case of
NSP, this may be related to the transcript-specific regulation by
thyroid hormone. Specifically, the NSP fragment amplified in the
differential display hybridized to two transcripts, a 1.5 kb transcript
designated NSP-C and a 3.5 kb transcript designated NSP-A (van de Velde
et al., 1994b ; Ninkina et al., 1997 ). Northern analysis of RNA
extracted from fetuses derived from MMI-treated dams showed that
T4 suppressed only NSP-A mRNA. Because NSP-A expression is much lower than that of NSP-C but our probe hybridized to
both transcripts, we may not have detected the selective effects of MMI
on NSP-A expression. Evaluation of the same tissues with probes
specific for NSP-A and NSP-C has confirmed this interpretation (A. L. S. Dowling, unpublished observations).
It must be noted, however, that hypothyroxinemia itself induces a
number of compensatory mechanisms that ameliorate the consequences of
low thyroid hormone levels in the fetal brain. These compensatory mechanisms may account for the unremarkable effects of MMI on the
expression of NSP and Oct-1. For example, thyroid hormone uptake into
tissues is enhanced in hypothyroid animals (Everts et al., 1994a ,b ,
1995 ; Moreau et al., 1999 ), as is the conversion of
T4 to T3 in fetal tissue
(Ruiz de Ona et al., 1988 ; Calvo et al., 1990 ). We observed the effects
of these compensatory mechanisms in that MMI-treated dams exhibited
elevated T4 and suppressed TSH for a shorter
duration after a single injection of T4. In the
original differential display, we eliminated the potential confounding
effects of compensatory mechanisms by comparing RNA pools extracted
from fetuses derived from thyroidectomized dams only. Therefore,
conditions under which genes were identified in the differential
display represented only a subset of conditions tested in our follow-up studies.
The functional characteristics of NSP and Oct-1 may provide insight
into thyroid hormone effects on the prenatal brain. NSP is a
neuron-specific protein (Wieczorek and Hughes, 1991 ) integrated into
the endoplasmic reticulum (van de Velde et al., 1994a ,b ), and its
expression is correlated with neuronal differentiation (Hens et al.,
1998 ). NSP mRNA is localized to the axonal pole of neuronal cell bodies
(Baka et al., 1996 ; Ninkina et al., 1997 ) and may play a role in
protein packaging and/or trafficking (Senden et al., 1996 ). As shown
here, expression of NSP appears to be regionally and developmentally
regulated. Overall, the abundance of NSP mRNA declines during
development in all areas studied. However, NSP expression is robust in
both the hippocampus and the cortex throughout development. In these
areas, NSP expression is consistently high from GD14, the earliest time
evaluated, to adulthood. At early developmental stages, NSP mRNA
appears to be more abundant in the intermediate zone of the cortex and
less abundant in the periventricular zone. As the brain matures and cortical layers develop, NSP expression in the cortex takes on a
laminar appearance. The regulation of NSP-A by thyroid hormone during
early cortical development and its differential expression in the
intermediate zone of the GD16 cortex supports the concept that NSP is
involved in neuronal differentiation and that this role is modulated by
thyroid hormone.
Oct-1 is a POU-domain protein (He et al., 1989 ; Treacy and Rosenfeld,
1992 ), named for the initial genes identified within this family,
Pit-1, Oct-1/2, and Unc-86. Downregulation of Oct-1 expression is
associated with cell cycle arrest and differentiation (Lakin et al.,
1995 ), suggesting a role for Oct-1 in proliferation. Like NSP, the
expression of Oct-1 appeared to be regionally and developmentally
regulated, and the abundance of Oct-1 mRNA declined during brain
development. In contrast to NSP, Oct-1 mRNA was detected both within
and outside the nervous system and in early development was selectively
expressed in the periventricular zone of the cortex. This zone contains
proliferating neurons (Caviness et al., 1995 ) that express only TR 1
(Bradley et al., 1992 ). Because Oct-1 has been shown to stimulate
TR 1 expression (Nagasawa et al., 1997 ), thyroid hormone may act
through TR 1 to enhance Oct-1 expression and maintain TR 1
expression in these proliferating neurons. Both TR 1 (Bradley et al.,
1992 ) and Oct-1 expression diminish once these neurons leave the
ventricular zone and begin to differentiate.
It is interesting to note that both NSP and Oct-1 expression retained
their responsiveness to thyroid hormone in the adult brain. However,
NSP expression was affected by thyroid hormone only in the hippocampus
where it was enhanced by hypothyroidism. In contrast, Oct-1 expression
was suppressed by thyroid hormone in both the cortex and the
hippocampus. Considering that the specific effect of thyroid hormone on
gene expression may depend on the cofactor recruited to the hormone
receptor complex (Koenig, 1998 ), the change in direction of regulation
of Oct-1 by thyroid hormone during development may be related to
developmental changes in coactivator and corepressor expression. In
addition, the retention of thyroid hormone responsiveness in adulthood
demonstrates that these genes do not exhibit a "critical period" of
thyroid hormone sensitivity. Finally, the observation that chemical
thyroidectomy does not fully abolish Oct-1 expression suggests that NSP
and Oct-1 expression are not fully dependent on thyroid status, but their expression is modulated nonetheless.
In conclusion, these studies show that thyroid hormone of maternal
origin can selectively regulate the expression of genes in the fetal
brain. Furthermore, these genes may retain their sensitivity to thyroid
hormone in the adult brain. One can reasonably speculate that maternal
thyroid hormone could influence gene expression in the fetal brain by a
direct mechanism and various indirect mechanisms. Our data support the
concept that thyroid hormone regulates the expression of NSP and Oct-1
by a direct action. Our use of differential display in combination with
an acute administration of a physiological dose of thyroid hormone may
have enhanced our ability to identify genes directly regulated by
thyroid hormone.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Nov. 9, 1999; revised Nov. 23, 1999; accepted Dec. 29, 1999.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants ES8333
and AA10418 and a Healey Endowment grant to R.T.Z. We are grateful to
Drs. Lawrence Schwartz, Michaela Heeb, Sandra Petersen, Geert De Vries,
and Christine Wagner for comments on early versions of this manuscript,
as well as to anonymous reviewers for their invaluable comments.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. R. Thomas Zoeller, Biology
Department, Morrill Science Center, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003. E-mail:
tzoeller{at}bio.umass.edu.
 |
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E. Auso, R. Lavado-Autric, E. Cuevas, F. E. del Rey, G. Morreale de Escobar, and P. Berbel
A Moderate and Transient Deficiency of Maternal Thyroid Function at the Beginning of Fetal Neocorticogenesis Alters Neuronal Migration
Endocrinology,
September 1, 2004;
145(9):
4037 - 4047.
[Abstract]
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R. M. Calvo, E. Jauniaux, B. Gulbis, M. Asuncion, C. Gervy, B. Contempre, and G. Morreale de Escobar
Fetal Tissues Are Exposed to Biologically Relevant Free Thyroxine Concentrations during Early Phases of Development
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.,
April 1, 2002;
87(4):
1768 - 1777.
[Abstract]
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F. R. S. Lima, A. Gervais, C. Colin, M. Izembart, V. M. Neto, and M. Mallat
Regulation of Microglial Development: A Novel Role for Thyroid Hormone
J. Neurosci.,
March 15, 2001;
21(6):
2028 - 2038.
[Abstract]
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A. L. S. Dowling, E. A. Iannacone, and R. T. Zoeller
Maternal Hypothyroidism Selectively Affects the Expression of Neuroendocrine-Specific Protein A Messenger Ribonucleic Acid in the Proliferative Zone of the Fetal Rat Brain Cortex
Endocrinology,
January 1, 2001;
142(1):
390 - 399.
[Abstract]
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G. Morreale de Escobar, M. Jesús Obregón, and F. Escobar del Rey
Is Neuropsychological Development Related to Maternal Hypothyroidism or to Maternal Hypothyroxinemia?
J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.,
November 1, 2000;
85(11):
3975 - 3987.
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P. M. G. Pombo, D. Barettino, G. Espliguero, M. Metsis, T. Iglesias, and A. Rodriguez-Pena
Transcriptional Repression of Neurotrophin Receptor trkB by Thyroid Hormone in the Developing Rat Brain
J. Biol. Chem.,
November 22, 2000;
275(48):
37510 - 37517.
[Abstract]
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