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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:2.3.1.107 (
DAT
)
1,471
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Clandestine chemists synthesize novel stimulant drugs by exploiting structural templates known to target monoamine transporters for dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin (
DAT
, NET, and SERT, respectively). 4-
Methylamphetamine
(4-MA) is an emerging drug of abuse that interacts with transporters, but limited structure-activity data are available for its analogs. Here we employed uptake and release assays in rat brain synaptosomes, voltage-clamp current measurements in cells expressing transporters, and calcium flux assays in cells coexpressing transporters and calcium channels to study the effects of increasing N-alkyl chain length of 4-MA on interactions at
DAT
, NET, and SERT. In addition, we performed intracranial self-stimulation in rats to understand how the chemical modifications affect abuse liability. All 4-MA analogs inhibited uptake at
DAT
, NET, and SERT, but lengthening the amine substituent from methyl to ethyl, propyl, and butyl produced a stepwise decrease in potency. N-methyl 4-MA was an efficacious substrate-type releaser at
DAT
that evoked an inward depolarizing current and calcium influx, whereas other analogs did not exhibit these effects. N-methyl and N-ethyl 4-MA were substrates at NET, whereas N-propyl and N-butyl 4-MA were not. All analogs acted as SERT substrates, though N-butyl 4-MA had very weak effects. Intracranial self-stimulation in rats showed that elongating the N-alkyl chain decreased abuse-related effects in vivo that appeared to parallel reductions in
DAT
activity. Overall, converging lines of evidence show that lengthening the N-alkyl substituent of 4-MA reduces potency to inhibit transporters, eliminates substrate activity at
DAT
and NET, and decreases abuse liability of the compounds.
...
PMID:N-Alkylated Analogs of 4-Methylamphetamine (4-MA) Differentially Affect Monoamine Transporters and Abuse Liability. 2853 Feb 34
4-
Methylamphetamine
(4-MA) is an emerging drug of abuse that acts as a substrate at plasma membrane transporters for dopamine (
DAT
), norepinephrine (NET), and serotonin (SERT), thereby causing nonexocytotic release of monoamine transmitters via reverse transport. Prior studies by us showed that increasing the N-alkyl chain length of N-substituted 4-MA analogues converts 4-MA from a transportable substrate (i.e., releaser) at
DAT
and NET to a nontransported blocker at these sites. Here, we studied the effects of the individual optical isomers of N-methyl-, N-ethyl-, and N- n-propyl 4-MA on monoamine transporters and abuse-related behavior in rats because action/function might be related to stereochemistry. Uptake inhibition and release assays were conducted in rat brain synaptosomes whereas electrophysiological assessments of drug-transporter interactions were examined using cell-based biosensors. Intracranial-self-stimulation in rats was employed to assess abuse potential in vivo. The experimental evidence demonstrates that S(+) N-methyl 4-MA is a potent and efficacious releaser at
DAT
, NET, and SERT with the highest abuse potential among the test drugs, whereas R(-) N-methyl 4-MA is a less potent releaser with reduced abuse potential. The S(+)ethyl analogue has decreased efficacy as a releaser at
DAT
but retains full release activity at NET and SERT with a reduction in abuse-related effects; the R(-)ethyl analogue has a similar profile but is less potent. S(+) N-Propyl 4-MA is a nontransported blocker at
DAT
and NET but an efficacious releaser at SERT, whereas the R enantiomer is almost inactive. In conclusion, the S enantiomers of the N-alkyl 4-MA analogues are most potent. Lengthening the N-alkyl chain converts compounds from potent nonselective releasers showing abuse-related effects to more selective SERT releasers with no apparent abuse potential.
...
PMID:Effects of N-Alkyl-4-Methylamphetamine Optical Isomers on Plasma Membrane Monoamine Transporters and Abuse-Related Behavior. 2969 51