Type 3 Deiodinase, a Thyroid-Hormone-Inactivating Enzyme, Controls Survival and Maturation of Cone Photoreceptors

Lily Ng(National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases), Arkady Lyubarsky(California University of Pennsylvania), Sergei Nikonov(California University of Pennsylvania), Michelle Ma(National Institutes of Health), Maya Srinivas(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Benjamin Kefas(National Institutes of Health), Donald L. St. Germain(Dartmouth College), Arturo Hernández(Dartmouth College), Edward N. Pugh(California University of Pennsylvania), Douglas Forrest(National Institutes of Health)
Journal of Neuroscience
March 3, 2010
Cited by 165Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Maturation of the mammalian nervous system requires adequate provision of thyroid hormone and mechanisms that enhance tissue responses to the hormone. Here, we report that the development of cones, the photoreceptors for daylight and color vision, requires protection from thyroid hormone by type 3 deiodinase, a thyroid hormone-inactivating enzyme. Type 3 deiodinase, encoded by Dio3, is expressed in the immature mouse retina. In Dio3(-/-) mice, approximately 80% of cones are lost through neonatal cell death. Cones that express opsin photopigments for response to both short (S) and medium-long (M) wavelength light are lost. Rod photoreceptors, which mediate dim light vision, remain essentially intact. Excessive thyroid hormone in wild-type pups also eliminates cones. Cone loss is mediated by cone-specific thyroid hormone receptor beta2 (TRbeta2) as deletion of TRbeta2 rescues cones in Dio3(-/-) mice. However, rescued cones respond to short but not longer wavelength light because TRbeta2 under moderate hormonal stimulation normally induces M opsin and controls the patterning of M and S opsins over the retina. The results suggest that type 3 deiodinase limits hormonal exposure of the cone to levels that safeguard both cone survival and the patterning of opsins that is required for cone function.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis