201. Thyroid system-disrupting chemicals: interference with thyroid hormone binding to plasma proteins and the cellular thyroid hormone signaling pathway
- Author
-
Kiyoshi Yamauchi and Akinori Ishihara
- Subjects
endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Thyroid Hormones ,Health (social science) ,endocrine system diseases ,Deiodinase ,Thyroid Gland ,Endocrine Disruptors ,Binding, Competitive ,Thyroid hormone receptor beta ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Thyroid hormone binding ,Thyroid hormone receptor ,biology ,Thyroid ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Biological Transport ,Blood Proteins ,Pollution ,Cell biology ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Thyroid hormone receptor alpha ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Hormone receptor ,Vertebrates ,biology.protein ,Environmental Pollutants ,Carrier Proteins ,Hormone ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
In vertebrates, thyroid hormones are essential for post-embryonic development, such as establishing the central nervous system in mammals and metamorphosis in amphibians. The present paper summarizes the possible extra-thyroidal processes that environmental chemicals are known to or suspected to target in the thyroid hormone-signaling pathway. We describe how such chemicals interfere with thyroid-hormone-binding protein functions in plasma, thyroid-hormone-uptake system, thyroid-hormone-metabolizing enzymes, and activation or suppression of thyroid-hormone-responsive genes through thyroid-hormone receptors in mammals and amphibian tadpoles. Several organohalogens affect different aspects of the extra-thyroidal thyroid-hormone-signaling pathway but hardly affect thyroid hormone binding to receptors. Rodents and amphibian tadpoles are most sensitive to the effects of environmental chemicals during specific thyroid-hormone-related developmental windows. Possible mechanisms by which environmental chemicals exert multipotent activities beyond one hormone-signaling pathway are discussed.
- Published
- 2007