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Resistance to thyroid hormone due to defective thyroid receptor alpha.


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Authors

Moran, Carla 
Chatterjee, Krishna  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2654-8854

Abstract

Thyroid hormones act via nuclear receptors (TRα1, TRβ1, TRβ2) with differing tissue distribution; the role of α2 protein, derived from the same gene locus as TRα1, is unclear. Resistance to thyroid hormone alpha (RTHα) is characterised by tissue-specific hypothyroidism associated with near-normal thyroid function tests. Clinical features include dysmorphic facies, skeletal dysplasia (macrocephaly, epiphyseal dysgenesis), growth retardation, constipation, dyspraxia and intellectual deficit. Biochemical abnormalities include low/low-normal T4 and high/high-normal T3 concentrations, a subnormal T4/T3 ratio, variably reduced reverse T3, raised muscle creatine kinase and mild anaemia. The disorder is mediated by heterozygous, loss-of-function, mutations involving either TRα1 alone or both TRα1 and α2, with no discernible phenotype attributable to defective α2. Whole exome sequencing and diagnostic biomarkers may enable greater ascertainment of RTHα, which is important as thyroxine therapy reverses some metabolic abnormalities and improves growth, constipation, dyspraxia and wellbeing. The genetic and phenotypic heterogeneity of RTHα and its optimal management remain to be elucidated.

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Keywords

corepressor, dominant negative inhibition, resistance to thyroid hormone, thyroid receptor α, Humans, Mutation, Phenotype, Thyroid Hormone Receptors alpha, Thyroid Hormone Resistance Syndrome, Thyroid Hormones

Journal Title

Best Pract Res Clin Endocrinol Metab

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1521-690X
1878-1594

Volume Title

29

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (095564/Z/11/Z)
Our research is supported by the Wellcome Trust (095564/Z/11/Z to KC), the National Institute for Health Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre and the British Thyroid Foundation (CM).