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1 in cardiomyocytes by proteosome-dependent degradation and altered mRNA stability
1North Shore-Long Island Jewish Research Institute and 2Departments of Cell Biology and Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, Manhasset, New York
Submitted 6 August 2004 ; accepted in final form 13 October 2004
Tri-iodo-L-thyronine (T3) is essential for maintaining normal cardiac contractile function by regulating transcription of numerous T3-responsive genes. Both hormone availability and relative amounts of nuclear thyroid hormone receptor isoforms (TR
1, TR
1) determine T3 effectiveness. Cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes grown in T3-depleted medium expressed predominantly TR
1 protein, but within 4 h of T3 treatment, TR
1 protein increased significantly, whereas TR
1 was decreased by 46 ± 5%. Using replication-defective adenoviruses to overexpress TR
1 in cardiomyocytes, we studied the mechanisms by which T3 mediated the decrease in TR
1 protein. Inhibitors of the proteosome pathway resulted in an accumulation of ubiquitylated TR
1 in the nucleus and prevented T3-induced degradation of ubiquitylated TR
1, suggesting that T3 induced proteosome-mediated degradation of TR
1; however, TR ubiquitylation was T3 independent. TR
1 transcriptional activity, measured using transient transfection of a thyroid hormone-responsive element (TRE) reporter plasmid, was T3 dose dependent and inversely proportional to nuclear TR
1 content, with 10 nM T3 having maximum effect. Quantitative RT-PCR showed that both endogenous and adenovirus-expressed TR
1 mRNAs were significantly decreased to 54 ± 11 and 25 ± 5%, respectively, within 4 h of T3 treatment. Measurements of TR
1 mRNA half-life in actinomycin D-treated cardiomyocytes showed that T3 treatment significantly decreased TR
1 mRNA half-life from 4 h to less than 2 h, whereas it had no effect of TR
1 mRNA half-life. These data support a role for both the proteosome degradation pathway and altered mRNA stability in T3-induced decrease of nuclear TR
1 in the cardiomyocyte and provide novel cellular targets for therapeutic development.
neonatal rat ventricular myocyte; adenovirus; tri-iodo-L-thyronine; c-erbA
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