Abstract
Summary
The hypothesis was examined that one reason severely iodine-deficient rats have a lower thyroidal labeled iodothyronine content than iodine-replete rats after 131I administration may be because thyroid iodine turnover is too rapid in the iodine-deficient rats to permit maximal labeled iodothyronine accumulation. Thyroid radioiodine accumulation and relative labeled amino acid distribution was examined between 3 and 24 hr after 131I administration to iodine-deficient rats. Half the animals were hypophysectomized to inhibit thyroid secretion 30 min before giving 131I. No increase in the proportion of thyroid 131I present as iodothyronines was produced by thus acutely inhibiting secretion. Our data therefore do not support the hypothesis. Addition of 1 μg 127I- to the 131I injection increased labeled iodothyronine synthesis (primarily as T4) in both intact and hypophysectomized iodine-deficient rats.
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