Abstract

The anterior pituitary is active mitotically and apoptotically under basal conditions and in response to a variety of physiological and pathophysiological stimuli. Hypothyroidism in man is associated with a modest but very occasionally dramatic increase in overall pituitary size. The mechanisms underlying this reversible phenomenon remain obscure. In the present study we have examined young adult rat anterior pituitary following surgical thyroidectomy and subsequent thyroid hormone treatment and withdrawal using an extremely accurate system for quantifying directly identified mitotic and apoptotic events. Despite the expected increase in the number and/or proportion of immunohistochemically identifiable thyrotrophs three weeks after thyroidectomy, mitotic and apoptotic activity remained unchanged, as did pituitary wet weight, in comparison with sham-operated and intact controls. In contrast, mitotic but not apoptotic activity was enhanced by treatment of thyroidectomized animals with thyroid hormones (triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine (T4) 1.8 microg and 3.6 microg/100 g body weight per day respectively), and once again declined to levels seen in intact animals within 72 h of subsequent thyroid hormone withdrawal. Thyroid hormone-induced enhancement of mitotic activity was also seen in intact rats treated with similar doses of thyroid hormones for 7 days and in thyroidectomized rats treated for a similar period with very low dose thyroid hormone replacement at a level that had no effect on raised hypothalamic TRH- or pituitary TSHbeta-transcript prevalence (0.018 microg T3 plus 0.036 microg T4/100 g body weight per day). Thus changes in mitotic and apoptotic activity are unlikely to be the principle mechanism for the apparent increase in thyrotrophs up to 4 weeks after thyroidectomy. In contrast, the data indicate that thyroid hormones have a permissive effect on anterior pituitary mitotic activity in thyroidectomized male rats. Thyroid hormone-induced enhancement of mitotic activity in intact rats further suggests that in euthyroid rats, ambient thyroid hormone levels are a limiting factor for anterior pituitary mitotic activity. In summary, this time course study of young, male rats has shown for the first time that thyroidectomy, thyroid hormone replacement and subsequent withdrawal has no significant effect on anterior pituitary apoptotic activity. Secondly, it has shown that the anterior pituitary mitotic response to thyroidectomy is blocked by complete thyroid hormone deprivation, but can be restored by very low level thyroid hormone replacement, and thirdly that in intact animals thyroid hormone levels significantly limit anterior pituitary mitotic activity.

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