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Intermittent recombinant TSH injections prevent ovariectomy-induced bone loss
Authors:Sun Li  Vukicevic Slobodan  Baliram Ramkumarie  Yang Guozhe  Sendak Rebecca  McPherson John  Zhu Ling-Ling  Iqbal Jameel  Latif Rauf  Natrajan Arjun  Arabi Ario  Yamoah Kosj  Moonga Baljit S  Gabet Yankel  Davies Terry F  Bab Itai  Abe Etsuko  Sampath Kuber  Zaidi Mone
Institution:The Mount Sinai Bone Program and The Thyroid Research Unit at the Bronx Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY 10029, USA.
Abstract:We recently described the direct effects of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) on bone and suggested that the bone loss in hyperthyroidism, hitherto attributed solely to elevated thyroid hormone levels, could at least in part arise from accompanying decrements in serum TSH. Recent studies on both mice and human subjects provide compelling evidence that thyroid hormones and TSH have the opposite effects on the skeleton. Here, we show that TSH, when injected intermittently into rodents, even at intervals of 2 weeks, displays a powerful antiresorptive action in vivo. By virtue of this action, together with the possible anabolic effects shown earlier, TSH both prevents bone loss and restores the lost bone after ovariectomy. Importantly, the osteoclast inhibitory action of TSH persists ex vivo even after therapy is stopped for 4 weeks. This profound and lasting antiresorptive action of TSH is mimicked in cells that genetically overexpress the constitutively active ligand-independent TSH receptor (TSHR). In contrast, loss of function of a mutant TSHR (Pro --> Leu at 556) in congenital hypothyroid mice activates osteoclast differentiation, confirming once again our premise that TSHRs have a critical role in regulating bone remodeling.
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