Abstract
Background: Thyroid hormone signaling is essential for development, metabolism, and response to stress but declines during aging, the cause of which is unknown. DNA damage accumulating with time is a main cause of aging, driving many age-related diseases. Previous studies in normal and premature aging mice, due to defective DNA repair, indicated reduced hepatic thyroid hormone signaling accompanied by decreased type 1 deiodinase (DIO1) and increased DIO3 activities. We investigated whether agingrelated changes in deiodinase activity are driven by systemic signals or represent cell- or organ-autonomous changes. Methods: We quantified liver and plasma thyroid hormone concentrations, d eiodinase activities and expression of T3-responsive genes in mice with a global, liver-specific and for comparison brain-specific inactivation of Xpg, one of the endonucleases critically involved in multiple DNA repair pathways. Results: Both in global and liver-specific Xpg knockout mice, hepatic DIO1 activity was decreased. Interestingly, hepatic DIO3 activity was increased in global, but not in liverspecific Xpg mutants. Selective Xpg deficiency and premature aging in the brain did not affect liver or systemic thyroid signaling. Concomitant with DIO 1 inhibition, Xpg-/- and Alb-Xpg mice displayed reduced thyroid hormone-related gene expression changes, correlating with markers of liver damage and cellular senescence. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that DIO1 activity during aging is predomin antly modified in a tissue-autonomous manner driven by organ/cell-intr insic accumulating DNA damage. The increase in hepatic DIO3 activity during aging largely depends on systemic signals, possibly reflecting the presence of circulatin g cells rather than activity in hepatocytes.
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Barnhoorn, S., Meima, M. E., Peeters, R. P., Darras, V. M., Leeuwenburgh, S., Hoeijmakers, J. H. J., … Visser, W. E. (2023). Decreased hepatic thyroid hormone signaling in systemic and liver-specific but not brain-specific accelerated aging due to DNA repair deficiency in mice. European Thyroid Journal, 12(6). https://doi.org/10.1530/ETJ-22-0231
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