Thyroid hormones control every cell in the organisms and, as indicated by many hormonal changes in astronauts during and shortly after space missions, its complex regulation may be influenced by gravity. To test in vitro the effects of gravity environment on thyroid, we selected a unique cultured cell system: the FRTL5, a normal follicular thyroid cell strain in continuous culture, originally derived from adult rat thyroids. To establish if modifications of the gravitational environment may interfere with post-receptorial signal transduction mechanisms in normal mammalian cultured cells, following our previous microgravity experiments, we exposed thyrotropin-stimulated and unstimulated FRTL5 cells to hypergravity (5 g and 9 g) in a special low-speed centrifuge. At all thyrotropin doses tested, we found significant increases in terms of cyclic AMP production in FRTL5 thyroid cells. The data here reported correlate well with our previous microgravity data, showing that the FRTL5 cells functionally respond to the variable gravity force in a dose-dependent manner in terms of cAMP production following TSH-stimulation.