Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 1993; 101(2): 87-93
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1211212
Original

© J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Effects of Selenium and Iodine Deficiency on Type I, Type II and Type III Iodothyronine Deiodinases and Circulating Thyroid Hormones in the Rat

H. Meinhold, A. Campos-Barros, B. Walzog, R. Köhler, F. Müller, D. Behne1
  • Department of Nuclear Medicine, Klinikum Steglitz, Free University Berlin
  • 1Department “Trace Elements in Health and Disease”, Hahn-Meitner-Institut Berlin/Germany
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
15 July 2009 (online)

Summary

The effects of nutritional selenium (Se) deficiency over a period of three generations and of a combined selenium and iodine deficiency on hepatic and cerebrocortical iodothyronine deiodinases and on circulating thyroid hormone levels were examined in the rat. Se deficiency strongly decreased hepatic type I iodothyronine 5′- and 5-deiodinase to 6—13% of that in controls. Iodine depletion had only a marginal decreasing effect on the type I activity. Cerebrocortical type II 5′-deiodinase was decreased in Se-deficient, iodine-replete rats. Its 5—6fold elevation in iodine-deficient rats was not reversed by additional selenium deficiency. Cortex type III 5-deiodinase was modestly decreased in all groups with insufficient trace element supply. Long-term Se deficiency has only limited effects on serum T4 and T3 levels. Two months of iodine deficiency decreased serum T4 to less than 10% of that in controls, but did not significantly affect serum T3 levels.

The strong decrease of hepatic outer- and inner-ring deiodination of T4 in Se deficiency obviously reflects the reduced tissue concentration of the type I deiodinase which was recently identified as a selenoenzyme. The maintenance of increased cerebrocortical type II deiodinase in iodine-depleted animals irrespective of adequate or deficient selenium supply suggests that the type II isoenzyme does not contain selenium in its catalytic site. Further studies are necessary to clarify whether the weak, but repeatedly confirmed decrease of cortex type III deiodinase is the direct effect of Se deficiency or the indirect consequence of the multilevel change in thyroid hormone metabolism. Though peripheral T4 deiodination in the rat greatly depends on the trace element selenium, the effects of its long-term deficiency on circulating thyroid hormones and thyroid function are apparently limited.

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