Maternal Thyroid Hormone Programs Cardiovascular Functions in the Offspring.

Thyroid

Institut für Endokrinologie und Diabetes, Center of Brain Behavior and Metabolism (CBBM), University of Lübeck, Lübeck, Germany.

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Maternal thyroid hormone (TH) is crucial for fetal development, particularly for the cardiovascular system, but its effects during different pregnancy stages are not well understood.
  • In a study using mice with a mutant thyroid hormone receptor α1, the researchers found that mothers treated with thyroid hormone during pregnancy did not alter growth or certain biochemical levels in their offspring; however, male mutants showed low serum T3 levels.
  • Notably, offspring born to mothers treated with TH exhibited increased heart weight and a higher heart rate, especially in males during later pregnancy stages, suggesting that monitoring TH levels in pregnant women is important for the offspring’s heart health.

Article Abstract

Maternal thyroid hormone (TH) plays an essential role for fetal development, especially for the cardiovascular system and its central control. However, the precise consequences of altered TH action during the different periods in pregnancy remain poorly understood. To address this question, we used mice heterozygous for a mutant thyroid hormone receptor α1 (TRα1) and wild-type controls that were born to wild-type mothers treated with 3,3',5-triiodothyronine (T3) during the first or the second half of pregnancy. We then phenotyped the offspring animals as adults by measurements and tissue analyses. Maternal T3 treatment in either half of the pregnancy did not affect postnatal growth development. Serum thyroxine and hypophyseal thyrotropin subunit beta or deiodinase type II expression was also not affected in any group, only TRα1 mutant males exhibited a reduction in serum T3 levels after the treatment. Likewise, hepatic deiodinase type I was not altered, but serum selenium levels were reduced by the maternal treatment in wild-type offspring of both genders. Most interestingly, a significant increase in heart weight was found in adult wild-types born to mothers that received T3 during the first or second half of pregnancy, while TRα1 mutant males were protected from this effect. Moreover, we detected a significant increase in heart rate selectively in male mice that were exposed to elevated maternal T3 in the second half of the pregnancy. Taken together, our findings demonstrate that maternal TH is of particular relevance during the second half of pregnancy for establishing cardiac properties, with specific effects depending on TRα1 or gender. The data advocate routinely monitoring TH levels during pregnancy to avoid adverse cardiac effects in the offspring.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/thy.2021.0275DOI Listing

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