I. INTRODUCTION
Although there usually is a good negative correlation between free T4 and
TSH levels, there are some notorious exceptions in which the feedback system
between fT4 and TSH seems to be disrupted. Most clinicians will be aware
of the fact that TSH levels can remain low, despite clinical euthyroidism
and normal concentrations of T4 and T3, in patients treated for Graves’
hyperthyroidism.
1 This situation is attributed to a delayed recovery of
the pituitary-thyroid axis after a prolonged state of thyrotoxicosis.
2
This explanation seemed to us unlikely for various reasons. First, TSH levels
increase within weeks after discontinuation of T4 therapy in patients treated
with TSH supressive doses of T4 for thyroid cancer, suggesting that the
pituitary-thyroid axis can revive fast. Secondly, not all patients treated
for Graves’ hyperthyroidism show this phenomenon of long-term TSH
suppression. And thirdly, a decreased level of TSH after a one year course
of antithyroid drugs is an independent risk factor for recurrence of hyperthyroidism
upon discontinuation of antithyroid drugs.
3 These clinical observations
suggest that the long-term TSH suppression in Graves’ disease is a
specific feature of a subset of Graves’ patients: those likely to
relapse after antithyroid drug therapy, e.g. patients with persisting TSH
Receptor Stimulating Immunoglobulins (TSI).
We hypothesized that TSI are responsible for the prolonged TSH suppression
observed in a subset of Graves’ patients. The implication would be
that TSI could decrease TSH secretion independently of thyroid status, at
the central (hypothalamus/pituitary) level. Because the pituitary gland
is outside the blood-brain barrier and the hypothalamus is not, we postulated
that the TSI may act on the pituitary level decreasing TSH secretion. A
requisite for this hypothesis is that the pituitary contains a TSH R.
II.
PHYSIOLOGICAL RELEVANCE OF A PITUITARY TSH-RECEPTOR: A PITUITARY ULTRA-SHORT
LOOP FEEDBACK.
The hypothesis of the existence of a pituitary TSH-Receptor implies that
this receptor might have a function in human physiology, since it would
be present in all subjects and not only in Graves’ patients. What
would the physiological role of such a receptor be? If present, this TSH-Receptor
might sense directly the pituitary TSH secretion. This is logical in the
sense that such a receptor would enable fine-tuning of pituitary TSH secretion.
In physiological circumstances a decline in T4 production by the thyroid
would be sensed in the pituitary, because of the negative feedback system
between T4 concentrations and TSH production. Such a decline would be
followed by an increase in TSH production leading to a stimulation of
the thyroid gland to produce more thyroid hormones. However, there is
a certain lag-time between the increase in TSH and a rise in plasma T4
and T3 levels. If during this lag-time TSH would remain elevated, an overshoot
in thyroid hormone production will ensue. This would not occur, if the
pituitary would be able to anticipate this effect of TSH on the thyroid
gland, for instance by measuring its own TSH output. For this it would
need a TSH-Receptor.
The hypothesis thus is that secreted TSH binds to an intrapituitary TSH-R,
which upon activation then signals back (e.g. via a cytokine) to the thyrotroph
to diminish its TSH secretion in an ultra-short loop feed-back system.
Such a short-loop feedback is not limited to TSH secretion. Prolactin
receptors,4 and GH Receptors5 have also been found in the pituitary, and
evidence is accumulating that PRL and GH down-regulate their own secretion.6,7
III. THE TSH-RECEPTOR IS PRESENT IN THE PITUITARY
We therefore embarked on a series of studies to demonstrate the presence
of the TSH-R in human pituitaries. We first showed by RT-PCR the presence
of mRNA encoding for the receptor in a human anterior pituitary library.
This was confirmed by using in situ hybridization on human anterior pituitary
slices. The presence of TSH-R protein was demonstrated using immunohistochemistry
on human anterior pituitaries and using double labeling techniques we
could show that the TSH-R was expressed by folliculo-stellate cells (Fig.
1).8

Fig.1
These findings were later confirmed by others, who also found that folliculo-stellate
cells contain TSH-R protein.9
These folliculo-stellate cells make up 10% of the pituitary cell population.
They are a kind of dendritic cells and thought to have a function in the
signalling with the other pituitary cell populations.10 Now
that we know that they express the TSH-R, their function becomes more
clear in that they possibly form part of the ultra-short loop feed back
on TSH secretion.
It is likely that they are also involved in a paracrine regulation of
the secretion of other hypophyseal hormones, because we later showed that
they also contain mRNA coding for the GH receptor and the ACTH receptor
(manuscript submitted).
IV. CLINICAL RELEVANCE OF THE PITUITARY TSH-RECEPTOR
As mentioned, the pituitary lies outside the blood-brain barrier and this
means that TSI may interact with this pituitary binding site. We postulated
that the physiological ligand, TSH, would downregulate TSH secretion to
some extent and hence TSI would do the same (Fig 2).

Fig. 2
To test this hypothesis, we treated rats with methimazole and thyroxine
(mimicking the block and replacement therapy used in Graves patients)
to switch off their thyroid glands, while maintaining euthyroidism. The
rats were then infused with human TSI containing IgG’s or a control
human IgG preparation, in some ways as in the old LATS assay. TSI infusion
indeed resulted in a significant decrease in TSH concentrations compared
to controls, without differences in T4 or T3 levels between both groups
(Fig 3).11

Fig. 3
This study thus showed that TSI is capable of reducing TSH secretion by
rat pituitaries independently of thyroid hormone concentrations, indicative
of a direct action of TSI on the pituitary TSH-R.
We then put our hypothesis to the proof in patients with Graves’
disease treated with block and replacement therapy. We followed a cohort
of 45 patients who were rendered euthyroid by methimazole and thyroxine
therapy. Three months after having achieved biochemical euthyroidism (defined
as normal free T4 and total T3 levels), 22 patients still had detectable
TSI (measured as TSH Binding Inhibiting Immunogolbulins, TBII assay) levels,
whereas in 23 patients TBII levels had become negative. We then compared
these two groups, which had similar free T4 and total T3 levels by that
time, for their TSH values. The TSI positive group had significantly lower
TSH values than the group who had become TSI negative (Fig 4).12
Fig. 4
In addition, we found that TSH levels in these treated Graves’ patients
only correlated with TBII titers and not with free T4 or total T3 concentrations.
These observations clearly support our notion, that TSI suppress TSH secretion
via a direct central effect, most likely at the pituitary level when euthyroidism
is restored.
V. CONCLUDING REMARKS
Long-term TSH suppression during otherwise successful treatment of Graves’
disease has always been attributed to a delayed recovery of the pituitary-thyroid
axis. Less experienced clinicians regard it as proof for still existing
“subclinical” hyperthyroidism and act accordingly by increasing
the methimazole dosage or decreasing T4 substitution.
The above mentioned experiments have clearly shown that prolonged TSH
suppression is very likely to be caused by an interaction between the
pituitary TSH-R and circulating TSH-R autoantibodies, which can remain
present in about half of treated Graves’ patients. Low TSH levels
in clinically euthyroid patients with normal T4 and T3 levels thus do
not indicate persisting low-grade hyperthyroidism, but should instead
be seen as an indication for continued TSI activity.
A low TSH value in such patients may be regarded as a positive “bio-assay”
for TSI activity and explain why decreased TSH values are an independent
risk factor for a relapse of Graves’ hyperthyroidism after a course
of antithyroid drugs.