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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)
We have previously reported that chronic elevation of insulin in the CNS of rats results in opposing changes of the mRNA expression for the
norepinephrine transporter
(NET; decreased) and the dopamine transporter (
DAT
; increased). In the present study we tested the hypothesis that a chronic depletion of insulin would result in opposite changes of NET and
DAT
mRNA expression, from those observed with chronic elevation of insulin. Rats were treated with streptozotocin to produce hypoinsulinemic diabetes. One week later, steady state levels of mRNA were measured by in situ hybridization for NET in the locus coeruleus (LC) and for
DAT
in the ventral tegmental area/substantia nigra compacta (VTA/SNc). The mRNA for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the rate-limiting enzyme for NE and DA synthesis, was measured in these same brain regions. In the diabetic animals, NET mRNA was significantly elevated (159 +/- 22% of average control level) while
DAT
mRNA was non-significantly decreased (78 +/- 9% of average control level). Additionally, TH mRNA was significantly altered in both the LC (131 +/- 11% of average control level) and VTA/SNc (79 +/- 5% of average control level). We conclude that endogenous insulin is one physiological regulator of the synthesis and re-uptake of NE and DA in the CNS.
...
PMID:Diabetes causes differential changes in CNS noradrenergic and dopaminergic neurons in the rat: a molecular study. 893 Mar 8
Quantitative in situ hybridization was utilized to map the distribution and abundance of the serotonin, dopamine and
norepinephrine transporter
(SERT,
DAT
and NET, respectively) mRNAs. SERT mRNA was quantified within the dorsal raphe (DR) and the median raphe (MR),
DAT
mRNA within the ventral tegmental area -substantia nigra (VTA-SN) region and NET mRNA within the locus coeruleus (LC). SERT mRNA expression within the raphe complex was organized into distinct subregional domains with the rank order of mRNA abundance: ventromedial (vm) DR > dorsomedial (dm) DR > MR > dorsolateral (dl) DR. The relative abundance of
DAT
mRNA also varied across subregions: SN pars compacta > the parabrachial pigmentosis (PBP) > the intrafascicular (IF). The effects of a 'binge' paradigm of cocaine administration on SERT,
DAT
and NET mRNA abundance were compared in the brains of behaviorally sensitized rats. Cocaine significantly decreased the abundance of the SERT mRNA within the dlDR and
DAT
mRNA abundance within the SNc and the PBP, and increased the abundance of the NET mRNA within the LC. Finally, correlational analysis indicated that post-cocaine levels of
DAT
, SERT and NET mRNAs were not associated with cocaine-induced sensitization.
...
PMID:Serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine transporter mRNAs: heterogeneity of distribution and response to 'binge' cocaine administration. 938 68
The monoamines, serotonin, dopamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine and histamine, play a critical role in the function of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and in the integration of information in sensory, limbic, and motor systems. The primary mechanism for termination of monoaminergic neurotransmission is through reuptake of released neurotransmitter by Na+, CI-dependent plasma membrane transporters. A second family of transporters packages monoamines into synaptic and secretory vesicles by exchange of protons. Identification of those cells which express these two families of neurotransmitter transporters is an initial step in understanding what adaptive strategies cells expressing monoamine transporters use to establish the appropriate level of transport activity and thus attain the appropriate efficiency of monoamine storage and clearance. The most recent advances in this field have yielded several surprises about their function, cellular and subcellular localization, and regulation, suggesting that these molecules are not static and most likely are the most important determinants of extracellular levels of monoamines. Here, information on the localization of mRNAs for these transporters in rodent and human brain is summarized along with immunohistochemical information at the light and electron microscopic levels. Regulation of transporters at the mRNA level by manipulation in rodents and differences in transporter site densities by tomographic techniques as an index of regulation in human disease and addictive states are also reviewed. These studies have highlighted the presence of monoamine neurotransmitter transporters in neurons but not in glia in situ. The
norepinephrine transporter
is present in all cells which are both tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)- and dopamine beta-hydroxylase-positive but not in those cells which are TH- and phenyl-N-methyltransferase-positive, suggesting that epinephrine cells may have their own, unique transporter. In most dopaminergic cells, dopamine transporter mRNA completely overlaps with TH mRNA-positive neurons. However, there are areas in which there is a lack of one to one correspondence. The serotonin transporter (5-HTT) mRNA is found in all raphe nuclei and in the hypothalamic dorsomedial nucleus where the 5-HTT mRNA is dramatically reduced following immobilization stress. The vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) is present in all monoaminergic neurons including epinephrine- and histamine-synthesizing cells. Immunohistochemistry demonstrates that the plasma membrane transporters are present along axons, soma, and dendrites. Subcellular localization of
DAT
by electron microscopy suggests that these transporters are not at the synaptic density but are confined to perisynaptic areas, implying that dopamine diffuses away from the synapse and that contribution of diffusion to dopamine signalling may vary between brain regions. Interestingly, the presence of VMAT2 in vesicles underlying dendrites, axons, and soma suggests that monoamines may be released at these cellular domains. An understanding of the regulation of transporter function may have important therapeutic consequences for neuroendocrine function in stress and psychiatric disorders.
...
PMID:Localization and dynamic regulation of biogenic amine transporters in the mammalian central nervous system. 966 36
We investigated the gene expression of three monoamine transporters (
norepinephrine transporter
, NET; serotonin transporter, SERT; and dopamine transporter,
DAT
) in the rat superior cervical ganglion (SCG). Most of principal ganglion neurons abundantly expressed NET mRNA. In addition, about 30% of principal ganglion neurons also expressed SERT mRNA. However,
DAT
mRNA expression was not observed there. These results suggest that serotonin as well as norepinephrine works as a neurotransmitter in a subset of principal ganglion neurons.
...
PMID:Expression of norepinephrine and serotonin transporter mRNAs in the rat superior cervical ganglion. 1010 Dec 35
The mechanism of release mediated by the human dopamine and
norepinephrine transporter
(
DAT
and NET, respectively) was studied by a superfusion technique in human embryonic kidney 293 cells stably transfected with the respective transporter cDNA and loaded with the metabolically inert substrate [(3)H]1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium. Release was induced by amphetamine, dopamine, and norepinephrine or by lowering the sodium or chloride concentration in the superfusion buffer (iso-osmotic replacement by lithium and isethionate, respectively). Efflux of [(3)H]1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium was analyzed at 30-s time resolution. In both transporters, release induced by the substrates amphetamine, dopamine, and norepinephrine followed the same time course as release induced by the removal of chloride and was faster than that caused by the removal of sodium. In the presence of low sodium (
DAT
: 10 mM; NET: 5 mM) none of the substrates was able to induce release from either type of cell, but adding back sodium to control conditions promptly restored the releasing action. In the presence of low chloride (
DAT
: 3 mM; NET: 2 mM), however, amphetamine as well as the catecholamines stimulated release from both types of cell. In contrast with the ion dependence of release observed in superfusion experiments, uptake initial rates of substrates at concentrations used in release experiments were the same or even higher at low sodium than at low chloride. The results indicate a decisive role of extracellular sodium for carrier-mediated release unrelated to the sodium-dependent uptake of the releasing substrate, and suggest a release mechanism different from simple exchange diffusion considering only the amines as substrates.
...
PMID:Ion dependence of carrier-mediated release in dopamine or norepinephrine transporter-transfected cells questions the hypothesis of facilitated exchange diffusion. 1053 12
Extracellular concentrations of monoamine neurotransmitters are regulated by a family of high-affinity transporters that are the molecular targets for such psychoactive drugs as cocaine, amphetamines, and therapeutic antidepressants. In Drosophila melanogaster, cocaine-induced behaviors show striking similarities to those induced in vertebrate animal models. Although a cocaine-sensitive serotonin carrier exists in flies, there has been no pharmacological or molecular evidence to support the presence of distinct carrier subtypes for other bioactive monoamines. Here we report the cloning and characterization of a cocaine-sensitive fly dopamine transporter (dDAT). In situ hybridization demonstrates that dDAT mRNA expression is restricted to dopaminergic cells in the fly nervous system. The substrate selectivity of dDAT parallels that of the mammalian DATs in that dopamine and tyramine are the preferred substrates, whereas octopamine is transported less efficiently, and serotonin not at all. In contrast, dDAT inhibitors display a rank order of potency most closely resembling that of mammalian norepinephrine transporters. Cocaine has a moderately high affinity to the cloned dDAT (IC50 = 2.6 microM). Voltage-clamp analysis of dDAT expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes indicates that dDAT-mediated uptake is electrogenic; however, dDAT seems to lack the constitutive leak conductance that is characteristic of the mammalian catecholamine transporters. The combination of a
DAT
-like substrate selectivity and
norepinephrine transporter
-like inhibitor pharmacology within a single carrier, and results from phylogenetic analyses, suggest that dDAT represents an ancestral catecholamine transporter gene. The identification of a cocaine-sensitive target linked to dopaminergic neurotransmission in D. melanogaster will serve as a basis for further dissection of the genetic components of psychostimulant-mediated behavior.
...
PMID:The antidepressant-sensitive dopamine transporter in Drosophila melanogaster: a primordial carrier for catecholamines. 1112 28
We used RT-PCR to clone monoamine transporters from Macaca mulatta, Macaca fasicularis and Saimiri sciureus (dopamine transporter;
DAT
) and Macaca mulatta (
norepinephrine transporter
; NET and serotonin transporter; SERT). Monkey
DAT
, NET and SERT proteins were >98% homologous to human and, when expressed in HEK-293 cells, displayed drug affinities and uptake kinetics that were highly correlated with monkey brain or human monoamine transporters. In contrast to reports of other species, we discovered double (leucine for phenylalanine 143 and arginine for glutamine 509; Variant I) and single (proline for leucine 355; Variant II) amino acid variants of
DAT
. Variant I displayed dopamine transport kinetics and binding affinities for various
DAT
blockers (including cocaine) versus [3H] CFT (WIN 35, 428) that were identical to wild-type
DAT
(n=7 drugs; r(2)=0.991). However, we detected a six-fold difference in the affinity of cocaine versus [3H] cocaine between Variant I (IC(50): 488+/-102 nM, SEM, n=3) and wild-type
DAT
(IC(50): 79+/-8.2 nM, n=3, P<0.05). Variant II was localized intracellularly in HEK-293 cells, as detected by confocal microscopy, and had very low levels of binding and dopamine transport. Also discovered was a novel exon 5 splice variant of NET that displayed very low levels of transport and did not bind cocaine. With NetPhos analysis, we detected a number of highly conserved putative phosphorylation sites on extracellular as well as intracellular loops of the
DAT
, NET, and SERT, which may be functional for internalized transporters. The homology and functional similarity of human and monkey monoamine transporters further support the value of primates in investigating the role of monoamine transporters in substance abuse mechanisms, neuropsychiatric disorders and development of diagnostic and therapeutic agents.
...
PMID:Cloning of dopamine, norepinephrine and serotonin transporters from monkey brain: relevance to cocaine sensitivity. 1122 67
The human dopamine transporter (hDAT) contains an endogenous high affinity Zn2+ binding site with three coordinating residues on its extracellular face (His193, His375, and Glu396). Upon binding to this site, Zn2+ causes inhibition of [3H]1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium ([3H]MPP+) uptake. We investigated the effect of Zn2+ on outward transport by superfusing hDAT-expressing HEK-293 cells preloaded with [3H]MPP+. Although Zn2+ inhibited uptake, Zn2+ facilitated [3H]MPP+ release induced by amphetamine, MPP+, or K+-induced depolarization specifically at hDAT but not at the human serotonin and the
norepinephrine transporter
(hNET). Mutation of the Zn2+ coordinating residue His(193) to Lys (the corresponding residue in hNET) eliminated the effect of Zn2+ on efflux. Conversely, the reciprocal mutation (K189H) conferred Zn2+ sensitivity to hNET. The intracellular [3H]MPP+ concentration was varied to generate saturation isotherms; these showed that Zn2+ increased V(max) for efflux (rather than K(M-Efflux-intracellular)). Thus, blockage of inward transport by Zn2+ is not due to a simple inhibition of the transporter turnover rate. The observations provide evidence against the model of facilitated exchange-diffusion and support the concept that inward and outward transport represent discrete operational modes of the transporter. In addition, they indicate a physiological role of Zn2+, because Zn2+ also facilitated transport reversal of
DAT
in rat striatal slices.
...
PMID:The role of zinc ions in reverse transport mediated by monoamine transporters. 1194 May 71
The release and clearance of electrically evoked catecholamine (CA) in the ventral portion of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BSTV) in mouse brain slices was evaluated with fast-scan cyclic voltammetry at carbon-fiber microelectrodes (CFME). Uptake in this region was observed to be markedly slower than in the caudate putamen (CPu). Clearance rates were reduced in the BSTV in both
norepinephrine transporter
knockout (NET KO) and dopamine transporter knockout (
DAT
KO) mice when compared to results in wild-type (WT) mice. However, uptake was faster in the BSTV in both the
DAT
and NET KO mice than in the CPu of
DAT
KO mice. This indicates that both transporters play a role in CA clearance in the BSTV. The transporters restrict extracellular CA to the general area of the BSTV, as revealed by the diminished signal as the CFME is moved sequentially further and further from the site where CA release is evoked. However, in slices from the
DAT
KOs and NET KOs, CA release could be observed outside of the BSTV region during such experiments. These results show that the low rate uptake in the BSTV facilitates extrasynaptic diffusion of catecholamine, but that uptake still regulates and limits the range of the transmitter to the region. Slower clearance from the extracellular fluid allows the released CA to act as a volume transmitter and diffuse to distant sites within the region to exert its neurochemical action.
...
PMID:Release and uptake of catecholamines in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis measured in the mouse brain slice. 1195 51
Both dopamine uptake inhibitors and sigma(1) receptor antagonists have been implicated as potential pharmacotherapeutics for the treatment of cocaine abuse. While the dopamine uptake inhibitors may share with cocaine neurochemical mechanisms underlying reinforcing properties, sigma(1) antagonists have been shown to attenuate some behavioral actions and toxic side effects associated with cocaine overdose. Rimcazole, a sigma(1) receptor antagonist that binds to the
DAT
(K(i) = 224 nM), is not behaviorally cocaine-like and attenuates some of the behavioral actions of cocaine. To determine the roles of both
DAT
and sigma(1) receptors in the behavioral actions of rimcazole, a series of analogues was synthesized. Initial studies identified two analogues (1 and 4) that showed high to moderate affinities for both
DAT
and sigma(1) receptors and failed to show cocaine-like discriminative stimulus (DS) effects. A second series of bis(4'-fluorophenyl)amine analogues have now been prepared in which the most potent
DAT
compound, 19 (K(i) = 8.5 nM), was selective over serotonin transporter (SERT/
DAT
= 94),
norepinephrine transporter
(NET/
DAT
= 63), and sigma(1) receptor binding (sigma(1)/
DAT
= 44). In addition, two other analogues 10 and 17 showed superior selectivity for
DAT
over SERT (170- and 140-fold, respectively) and
DAT
over NET (219- and 190-fold, respectively) but were essentially equipotent at
DAT
and sigma(1) receptors (10; K(i) = 77 and 124 nM, respectively, 17; K(i) = 28 and 13 nM, respectively). CoMFA studies at both
DAT
and sigma(1) receptors were performed to examine structural requirements for optimal binding at these two targets as well as to assess differences between them. Behavioral evaluation of analogues with varying affinities for both
DAT
and sigma(1) receptors may provide a novel approach toward designing medications for cocaine abuse.
...
PMID:Dual probes for the dopamine transporter and sigma1 receptors: novel piperazinyl alkyl-bis(4'-fluorophenyl)amine analogues as potential cocaine-abuse therapeutic agents. 1280 Dec 23
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