DIO3 protects from thyrotoxicosis-derived cranio-encephalic and cardiac congenital abnormalities
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-27-2022
Institution/Department
MaineHealth Institute for Research
Journal Title
JCI insight
Abstract
Maternal hyperthyroidism is associated with an increased incidence of congenital abnormalities at birth, but it is not clear which of those defects arise from a transient developmental excess of thyroid hormone, and which depend on pregnancy stage, antithyroid drug choice, or unwanted subsequent fetal hypothyroidism. To address this issue we studied a mouse model of comprehensive developmental thyrotoxicosis secondary to a lack of type 3 deiodinase (DIO3). Dio3-/- mice exhibit reduced neonatal viability on most genetic backgrounds and perinatal lethality on a C57BL/6 background. Dio3-/- mice exhibit severe growth retardation during the neonatal period and cartilage loss. Mice surviving after birth manifest brain and cranial dysmorphisms, severe hydrocephalus, choanal atresia, and cleft palate. These abnormalities are noticeable in C57BL/6J Dio3-/- mice at fetal stages, in addition to a thyrotoxic heart with septal defects and thin ventricular walls. Our findings stress the protecting role of DIO3 during development and support the hypothesis that human congenital abnormalities associated with hyperthyroidism during pregnancy are caused by transient thyrotoxicosis before clinical intervention. Our results also suggest thyroid hormone involvement in the etiology of idiopathic pathologies including cleft palate, choanal atresia, Chiari malformations, Kaschin-Beck disease, and Temple and other cranio-encephalic and heart syndromes.
Recommended Citation
Martinez ME, Pinz I, Preda M, Norton CR, Gridley T, Hernandez A. DIO3 protects from thyrotoxicosis-derived cranio-encephalic and cardiac congenital abnormalities [published online ahead of print, 2022 Sep 27]. JCI Insight. 2022;e161214. doi:10.1172/jci.insight.161214