Thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells

Thyroid hormone signaling has been known for a long time to be required for proper neurodevelopment and the maintenance of cognitive functions in the adult brain. As thyroid hormone excess or deficiency is usually well handled by clinicians, research dedicated to the neural function of thyroid hormo...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
:
Year of Publication:2016
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (106 p.)
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spelling Bernal, Juan auth
Thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells
Frontiers Media SA 2016
1 electronic resource (106 p.)
text txt rdacontent
computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Frontiers Research Topics
Thyroid hormone signaling has been known for a long time to be required for proper neurodevelopment and the maintenance of cognitive functions in the adult brain. As thyroid hormone excess or deficiency is usually well handled by clinicians, research dedicated to the neural function of thyroid hormone, have not been a priority within the field. This is changing mainly for two reasons. First, new genetic diseases have been discovered, altering thyroid hormone signaling in brain (THRA, MCT8, SBP2), with neurodevelopmental consequences which are currently incurable. Second, there is a growing concern that exposition of the general population to environmental chemicals able to interfere with thyroid hormone signaling compromises children neurodevelopment or induces central disorders in adults. Finally thyroid hormone is acting directly on gene transcription, by binding nuclear receptors, and therefore is an interesting entry point to identify genetic programs controlling brain development and function. Reaching a broad understanding of the multiple processes involving thyroid hormone in brain is a tremendous task which will necessitate a multidisciplinary approach: animal genetics, molecular biology, brain imaging, developmental biology, genomics, etc... This topic will be the occasion to combine recent contributions in the field and to identify priorities for future investigations. Due to devastating consequences of congenital hypothyroidism, the neurodevelopmental consequences of altered thyroid hormone signaling have been extensively studied over the years. The discovery of new genetic diseases, the concern about the possible neurotoxicity of environmental thyroid hormone disruptors, recently renewed the interest for an important research field. This Ebook gathers reviews and original data from experts in various disciplines. It provides a broad view of ongoing research and outlines key issues for future investigation.
English
thyroid hormone
neurodevelopment
transporter
nuclear receptor
brain
deiodinase
2-88919-702-6
Flamant, Frederic auth
Koibuchi, Noriyuki auth
language English
format eBook
author Bernal, Juan
spellingShingle Bernal, Juan
Thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Bernal, Juan
Flamant, Frederic
Koibuchi, Noriyuki
author_variant j b jb
author2 Flamant, Frederic
Koibuchi, Noriyuki
author2_variant f f ff
n k nk
author_sort Bernal, Juan
title Thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells
title_full Thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells
title_fullStr Thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells
title_full_unstemmed Thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells
title_auth Thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells
title_new Thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells
title_sort thyroid hormone in brain and brain cells
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2016
physical 1 electronic resource (106 p.)
isbn 2-88919-702-6
illustrated Not Illustrated
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