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Extracellular phase separation mediates storage and release of thyroglobulin in the thyroid follicular lumen
Extracellular phase separation mediates storage and release of thyroglobulin in the thyroid follicular lumen
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Extracellular phase separation mediates storage and release of thyroglobulin in the thyroid follicular lumen
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Extracellular phase separation mediates storage and release of thyroglobulin in the thyroid follicular lumen
Extracellular phase separation mediates storage and release of thyroglobulin in the thyroid follicular lumen

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Extracellular phase separation mediates storage and release of thyroglobulin in the thyroid follicular lumen
Extracellular phase separation mediates storage and release of thyroglobulin in the thyroid follicular lumen
Journal Article

Extracellular phase separation mediates storage and release of thyroglobulin in the thyroid follicular lumen

2025
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Overview
Thyroid hormones are produced by the thyroid gland and are essential for regulating metabolism, growth and development. Maintenance of circulating thyroid hormone levels within an appropriate range is thus a prerequisite for health. In vivo, this objective is, at least in part, facilitated through an extracellular storage depot of thyroglobulin, the glycoprotein precursor for thyroid hormones, in the thyroid follicular lumen. The molecular basis for how soluble thyroglobulin molecules form such dense depot assemblies remains elusive. Here, we describe in vitro biophysical analysis of thyroglobulin phase behaviour, suggesting that thyroglobulin is prone to undergoing ionic strength-dependent phase separation, leading to the formation of liquid-like condensates. Fluorescence photobleaching measurements further show that these condensates age as a function of time to form reversible gel-like high density storage depots of thyroglobulin. IF experiments on mouse and human thyroid follicles ex vivo reveal that spherical globules of Tg protein dense phase are present in the follicular lumen, consistent with the idea that Tg undergoes phase separation. These findings reveal a molecular mechanism for the last-come-first-served process of thyroglobulin storage and release, suggesting a role for extracellular phase separation in thyroid hormone homeostasis by providing organizational and architectural specificity without requiring membrane-mediated confinement. A biophysical study on phase separation behaviour of thyroglobulin (Tg) in vitro, combined with ex vivo immunofluorescence experiments, suggests that extracellular phase separation mediates storage and release of Tg in the thyroid follicular lumen.