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Thyroid hormone is required for hypothalamic neurons regulating cardiovascular functions
Jens Mittag, … , Anders Arner, Björn Vennström
Jens Mittag, … , Anders Arner, Björn Vennström
Published December 21, 2012
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2013;123(1):509-516. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI65252.
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Research Article Article has an altmetric score of 54

Thyroid hormone is required for hypothalamic neurons regulating cardiovascular functions

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Abstract

Thyroid hormone is well known for its profound direct effects on cardiovascular function and metabolism. Recent evidence, however, suggests that the hormone also regulates these systems indirectly through the central nervous system. While some of the molecular mechanisms underlying the hormone’s central control of metabolism have been identified, its actions in the central cardiovascular control have remained enigmatic. Here, we describe a previously unknown population of parvalbuminergic neurons in the anterior hypothalamus that requires thyroid hormone receptor signaling for proper development. Specific stereotaxic ablation of these cells in the mouse resulted in hypertension and temperature-dependent tachycardia, indicating a role in the central autonomic control of blood pressure and heart rate. Moreover, the neurons exhibited intrinsic temperature sensitivity in patch-clamping experiments, providing a new connection between cardiovascular function and core temperature. Thus, the data identify what we believe to be a novel hypothalamic cell population potentially important for understanding hypertension and indicate developmental hypothyroidism as an epigenetic risk factor for cardiovascular disorders. Furthermore, the findings may be beneficial for treatment of the recently identified patients that have a mutation in thyroid hormone receptor α1.

Authors

Jens Mittag, David J. Lyons, Johan Sällström, Milica Vujovic, Susi Dudazy-Gralla, Amy Warner, Karin Wallis, Anneke Alkemade, Kristina Nordström, Hannah Monyer, Christian Broberger, Anders Arner, Björn Vennström

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Figure 3

Electrophysiological responses of pv+ cells in the AHA.

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Electrophysiological responses of pv+ cells in the AHA.
 
(A) Differenti...
(A) Differential interference contrast (DIC) micrograph showing a recorded AHA pv+ neuron (indicated by an asterisk) (left; scale bar: 200 μm) and higher-magnification images of the same GFP-positive neuron under fluorescence and DIC (right; 500-fold magnification). (B) Response of AHA pv+ neurons to angiotensin II (82% no response; n = 14 out of 17). (C) Temperature responsiveness of the AHA pv+ cells to heat (31% inhibited, n = 5 out of 16, and 69% excited, n = 11 out of 16) in patch-clamp recordings on hypothalamic sections of transgenic pvGFP mice. (D) Response of AHA pv+ neurons to TRH (48% excited, n = 10 out of 21; 19% inhibited, n = 4 out of 21; and 33% nonresponsive, n = 7 out of 21) (the neuron in the top panel was held below threshold to prevent action potential firing; no holding current was applied in the other experiments).

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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