Toxicological Sciences, Vol 49, 263-271, Copyright © 1999 by Society of Toxicology
A Hood, YP Liu, VH Gattone 2nd and CD Klaassen
Antithyroid drugs and phenobarbital (PB) have been shown to promote thyroid
tumors in rats. It has been proposed that increased thyroid- stimulating
hormone (TSH) mediates the thyroid tumor-promoting effect of antithyroid
drugs and PB, and is increased because of decreased thyroxine (T4)
concentration. However, PB is much less effective than antithyroid drugs at
increasing TSH. It has been proposed that small increases in serum TSH
produced by PB treatment is sufficient to promote thyroid tumors. However,
the level to which TSH must be increased to stimulate the thyroid gland has
not been reported. Therefore, we have examined the effect of increasing
serum TSH concentration on thyroid growth by measuring thyroid gland weight
and thyroid follicular cell proliferation. Serum TSH concentrations were
increased by feeding rats various concentrations of propylthiouracil (PTU)
or methimazole (MMI) for 21 days. Serum total T4, free T4, total T3
(triiodothyronine), free T3, and TSH concentrations were measured by
radioimmunoassay. Thyroid follicular cell proliferation was measured by
autoradiography and expressed as a labeling index (LI). PTU and MMI
treatments reduced total and free T4 more than 95% by day 21, whereas total
and free T3 were reduced 60%. TSH, thyroid follicular cell proliferation
and thyroid weight were increased 560%, 1400%, and 200%, respectively, by
day 21. TSH was significantly correlated with thyroid weight and LI.
Moderate increases in serum TSH of between 10 and 20 ng/ml increased the
number of proliferating thyroid follicular cells, but had no effect on
thyroid weight. These results support that small increases in serum TSH can
be sufficient to stimulate thyroid follicular cell proliferation.
Furthermore, thyroid follicular cell proliferation may be more useful than
thyroid weight alone for assessing alterations in thyroid growth in rats
treated with chemicals that produce only small to moderate increases in
serum TSH.
ARTICLES
Sensitivity of thyroid gland growth to thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) in rats treated with antithyroid drugs
Department of Pharmacology, Toxicology, and Therapeutics, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City 66160-7140, USA.
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