Most components of the thyroid system in bony fish have been described and characterized, with the notable exception of thyroid hormone membrane transporters. We have cloned, sequenced, and expressed the zebrafish solute carrier Slc16a2 (alsonamedmonocarboxylate transporter Mct8) cDNA and established its role as a thyroid hormone transport protein. The cloned cDNA shares 56-57% homology with its mammalian orthologs. The 526-amino-acid sequence contains 12 predicted transmembrane domains. An intracellular N-terminal PEST domain, thought to be involved in proteolytic processing of the protein, is present in the zebrafish sequence. Measured at initial rate and at the body/rearing temperature of zebrafish (26 C), T 3 uptake by zebrafish Slc16a2 is a saturable process with a calculated Michaelis-Menten constant of 0.8 μMT 3. The rate of T 3 uptake is temperature dependent and Na + independent. Interestingly, at 26 C, zebrafish Slc16a2 does not transport T 4. This implies that at a normal body temperature in zebrafish, Slc16a2 protein is predominantly involved in T 3 uptake. When measured at 37 C, zebrafish Slc16a2 transports T 4 in a Na +-independent manner. In adult zebrafish, the Slc16a2 gene is highly expressed in brain, gills, pancreas, liver, pituitary, heart, kidney, and gut. Beginning from the midblastula stage, Slc16a2 is also expressed during zebrafish early development, the highest expression levels occurring 48 h after fertilization. This is the first direct evidence for thyroid hormone membrane transporters in fish. We suggest that Slc16a2 plays a key role in the local availability of T 3 in adult tissues as well as during the completion of morphogenesis of primary organ systems. Copyright

doi.org/10.1210/en.2011-1166, hdl.handle.net/1765/74020
Endocrinology
Department of Internal Medicine

Arjona, F., de Vrieze, E., Visser, T., Flik, J., & Klaren, V. N. (2011). Identification and functional characterization of zebrafish solute carrier Slc16a2 (Mct8) as a thyroid hormone membrane transporter. Endocrinology, 152(12), 5065–5073. doi:10.1210/en.2011-1166