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Developmental thyroid disruption permanently affects the neuroglial output in the murine subventricular zone

Pieter Vancamp, Karine Le Blay, Lucile Butruille, Anthony Sébillot, Anita Boelen, Barbara Demeneix, Sylvie Remaud

2022Stem Cell Reports27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Neural stem cells (NSCs) in the adult brain are a source of neural cells for brain injury repair. We investigated whether their capacity to generate new neurons and glia is determined by thyroid hormone (TH) during development because serum levels peak during postnatal reorganization of the main NSC niche, the subventricular zone (SVZ). Re-analysis of mouse transcriptome data revealed increased expression of TH transporters and deiodinases in postnatal SVZ NSCs, promoting local TH action, concomitant with a burst in neurogenesis. Inducing developmental hypothyroidism reduced NSC proliferation, disrupted expression of genes implicated in NSC determination and TH signaling, and altered the neuron/glia output in newborns. Three-month-old adult mice recovering from developmental hypothyroidism had fewer olfactory interneurons and underperformed on short-memory odor tests, dependent on SVZ neurogenesis. Our data provide readouts permitting comparison with adverse long-term events following thyroid disruptor exposure and ideas regarding the etiology of prevalent neurodegenerative diseases in industrialized countries.

Topics & Concepts

Subventricular zoneNeurogenesisBiologyNeural stem cellThyroidNeuroscienceTranscriptomeEndocrinologyCell biologyStem cellGene expressionGeneGeneticsNeurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanismsBirth, Development, and HealthThyroid Disorders and Treatments
Developmental thyroid disruption permanently affects the neuroglial output in the murine subventricular zone | Litcius