Abstract
The pathophysiology of brain damage that is common to ischemia–reperfusion injury and brain trauma include disodered neuronal and glial cell energetics, intracellular acidosis, calcium toxicity, extracellular excitotoxic glutamate accumulation, and dysfunction of the cytoskeleton and endoplasmic reticulum. The principal thyroid hormones, 3,5,3′-triiodo-l-thyronine (T3) and l-thyroxine (T4), have non-genomic and genomic actions that are relevant to repair of certain features of the pathophysiology of brain damage. The hormone can non-genomically repair intracellular H+ accumulation by stimulation of the Na+/H+ exchanger and can support desirably low [Ca2+]i.c. by activation of plasma membrane Ca2+–ATPase. Thyroid hormone non-genomically stimulates astrocyte glutamate uptake, an action that protects both glial cells and neurons. The hormone supports the integrity of the microfilament cytoskeleton by its effect on actin. Several proteins linked to thyroid hormone action are also neuroprotective. For example, the hormone stimulates expression of the seladin-1 gene whose gene product is anti-apoptotic and is potentially protective in the setting of neurodegeneration. Transthyretin (TTR) is a serum transport protein for T4 that is important to blood–brain barrier transfer of the hormone and TTR also has been found to be neuroprotective in the setting of ischemia. Finally, the interesting thyronamine derivatives of T4 have been shown to protect against ischemic brain damage through their ability to induce hypothermia in the intact organism. Thus, thyroid hormone or hormone derivatives have experimental promise as neuroprotective agents.
Highlights
Molecular basis for certain neuroprotective effects of thyroid hormoneEdited by: Isabel Varela-Nieto, Consejo Superior Investigaciones Científicas, Spain
The critical contributions of thyroid hormone to development of the nervous system (Farwell et al, 2006; Bernal, 2007), to mature and immature brain glial cell (Siegrist-Kaiser et al, 1990; Farwell et al, 1995, 2006), and neuronal function (Yonkers and Ribera, 2008; Zhou et al, 2011) and to behavior (Davis et al, 2010) are well-known
While hypothyroidism has been reported by some observers to be neuroprotective in the setting of ischemia (Shuaib et al, 1994a; Alevizaki et al, 2006), repeated administration of l-thyroxine (T4) has been shown to protect against brain ischemia (Rami and Krieglstein, 1992) and thyroid hormone is known to support the integrity of brain vasculature (Schlenker et al, 2008)
Summary
Edited by: Isabel Varela-Nieto, Consejo Superior Investigaciones Científicas, Spain. Reviewed by: Beatriz Morte, Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Raras, Spain Andréa Gonçalves Trentin, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil. The pathophysiology of brain damage that is common to ischemia–reperfusion injury and brain trauma include disodered neuronal and glial cell energetics, intracellular acidosis, calcium toxicity, extracellular excitotoxic glutamate accumulation, and dysfunction of the cytoskeleton and endoplasmic reticulum. The principal thyroid hormones, 3,5,3 -triiodo-Lthyronine (T3) and L-thyroxine (T4), have non-genomic and genomic actions that are relevant to repair of certain features of the pathophysiology of brain damage. Thyroid hormone non-genomically stimulates astrocyte glutamate uptake, an action that protects both glial cells and neurons. Several proteins linked to thyroid hormone action are neuroprotective.
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