Abstract
Introduction THYROID hormones circulate in the bloodstream mostly bound to a set of plasma proteins which widely differ in their concentration and affinity for the hormones (1). The three major transport proteins are T4-binding globulin (TBG), T4-binding prealbumin (TBPA), and albumin. TBG carries about 70% of T4 in the circulation and, therefore, represents physiologically the most important T4-binding protein (1). TBPA has been named transthyretin (TTR) for the role it also plays in the transport of the retinol-binding protein. Less important proteins with thyroid hormone-binding activity are lipoproteins (2–4): also the 27 K protein identified in normal human plasma and synthesized by human liver cell in culture (5–7) would appear to be apolipoprotein A-l (8). In the last few years, several papers have provided more precise information concerning TBG biosynthesis, the effects of its interaction with the carbohydrate moieties and with the ligand (T4), factors controlling TBG synthesis, TBG gene structur...
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