Abstract
It has emerged in the last decade that the molecular mechanism of action of thyroid hormones resembles that of steroids; thyroid hormones indeed exert their effects mainly by directly regulating gene expression, on association with specific chromatin-bound receptors. Of the two thyroid hormones, thyroxine (T4) appears to be a sort of prohormone, whereas triiodothyronine (T3) seems to be the active form; in this respect, T4-deiodination, which occurs at the level of the target tissues, may be crucial in the local homeostasis of T3. Moreover, many cellular compartments, other than the nucleus, can bind thyroid hormone, and at least some of these further sites might play some role in modulating T3 supply to the nucleus. The binding of the T3-receptor complex to chromatin is likely to regulate the structural organization of specific genes and, in some instances, of the chromatin as a whole.
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