Structure-activity relationships for thyroid hormone deiodination by mammalian type I iodothyronine deiodinases

Endocrinology
N ToyodaT J Visser

Abstract

The bioactivity of thyroid hormone is determined to a large extent by the monodeiodination of the prohormone T4 by the hepatic selenoenzyme type I iodothyronine deiodinase (IDI), i.e. by outer ring deiodination (ORD) to the active hormone T3' or by inner ring deiodination (IRD) to the inactive metabolite rT3. IDI also catalyzes the IRD of T3 and the ORD of rT3' both to T2, as well as the deiodination of different iodothyronine sulfates, e.g. IRD of T3S and ORD of T2S. Previous studies have indicated important differences in catalytic specificity between dog IDI (dID1) and human ID1 (hID1), in particular with respect to the ORD of rT3. This study was done to investigate the relationship between structure and catalytic function of this enzyme by comparing the deiodination of T4, T3, rT3, T3S, and T2S by native dID1 and hID1 in liver microsomes as well as by recombinant wild-type, chimeric and mutated d/hID1 enzymes expressed in HEK293 cells. With both native and recombinant wild-type enzymes, the substrate specificity was T3S > T2S approximately rT3 approximately T4 > T3 for dID1, and rT3 > > T2S approximately T3S > T4 approximately T3 for hID1. Whereas ORD of T4 and of T4, T3, and T3S showed relatively little variation between t...Continue Reading

Citations

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