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Oxford University Press, Endocrinology, 12(156), p. 4731-4740, 2015

DOI: 10.1210/en.2015-1464

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Disrupted TSH Receptor Expression in Female Mouse Lung Fibroblasts Alters Subcellular IGF-1 Receptor Distribution

Journal article published in 2015 by Stephen J. Atkins, Stephen I. Lentz, Roshini Fernando, Terry J. Smith ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

A relationship between the actions of thyrotropin (TSH) and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) was first recognized several decades ago. The close physical and functional associations between their respective receptors (TSHR) and (IGF-1R) has been described more recently in thyroid epithelium and human orbital fibroblasts as has the non-canonical behavior of IGF-1R. Here we report studies conducted in lung fibroblasts from female wild-type C57/B6 (TSHR(+/+)) mice and their littermates in which TSHR has been knocked out (TSHR(-/-)). Flow cytometric analysis revealed that cell surface IGF-1R levels are substantially lower in TSHR(-/-) fibroblasts compared with TSHR(+/+) fibroblasts. Confocal immunoflourescence microscopy revealed similar divergence with regard to both cytoplasmic and nuclear IGF-1R. Western blot analysis demonstrated both intact IGF-1R and receptor fragments in both cellular compartments. In contrast, IGF-1R mRNA levels were similar in fibroblasts from mice without and with intact TSHR expression. IGF-1 treatment of TSHR(+/+) fibroblasts resulted in reduced nuclear and cytoplasmic staining for IGF-1Rα while it enhanced nuclear signal in TSHR(-/-) cells. In contrast, IGF-1 enhanced cytoplasmic IGF-1Rβ in TSHR(-/-) fibroblasts while increasing the nuclear signal in TSHR(+/+) cells. These findings indicate the intimate relationship between TSHR and IGF-1R found earlier in human orbital fibroblasts also exists in mouse lung fibroblasts. Further, the presence of TSHR in these fibroblasts influenced not only the levels of IGF-1R protein but also its subcellular distribution and response to IGF-1. They suggest that the mouse might serve as a suitable model for delineating the molecular mechanisms overarching these two receptors.