Abstract

When spermdine, putrescine or 1,3-diaminopropane was injected (12.5 μmol/100 g body weight) into rats i h before thyrotropin, ornithine decarboxylase activity was increased by 75–150% over control levels. However, when ⩾75 μmol polyamine/100 g body weight was injected, thyrotropin-activated activity was inhibited by 70–95%. Multiple polyamine injections inhibited goitrogen-induced activity and gland weight increase by approx. 35%. The polyamines also inhibited thyrotrophin-activated rat thyroid ornithine decarboxylase in vitro in a dose-related fashion, with 50% inhibition occurring at 2–5 · 10 −4 M. The inhibition was not due to a direct effect on the enzyme. No stimulation was seen with low concentration of polyamine. The polyamines had no effect on in vitro thyroid protein/RNA synthesis or glucose oxidation but had a biphasic effect on plasma membrane adenylate cyclase activity. A protein inhibitor to thyroid ornithine decarboxylase was generated in vivo by multiple injections of the polyamines into rats, and in vitro by incubating bovine thyroid slices with 2–10 mM polyamine. The inhibitor was non-dialyzable, destroyed by boiling, and its formation was blocked in a dose-related fashion by cycloheximide. We conclude that: (1) thyroid ornithine decarboxylase is subject not only to positive control, but is also negatively regulated by its end-products, the polyamines, which induce a protein inhibitor to ornithine decarboxylase; (2) since gland growth is also inhibited under these conditions, the polyamine effect on thyroid ornithine decarboxylase may be biologically significant.

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