14 research outputs found
Tamoxifen and its active metabolites inhibit dopamine transporter function independently of the estrogen receptors
As one of the primary mechanisms by which dopamine signaling is regulated, the dopamine transporter (DAT) is an attractive pharmacological target for the treatment of diseases based in dopaminergic dysfunction. In this work we demonstrate for the first time that the commonly prescribed breast cancer therapeutic tamoxifen and its major metabolites, 4âhydroxytamoxifen and endoxifen, inhibit DAT function. Tamoxifen inhibits [3H]dopamine uptake into human DAT (hDAT)âN2A cells via an uncompetitive or mixed mechanism. Endoxifen, an active metabolite of tamoxifen, asymmetrically inhibits DAT function in hDATâN2A cells, showing a preference for the inhibition of amphetamineâstimulated dopamine efflux as compared to dopamine uptake. Importantly, we demonstrate that the effects of tamoxifen and its metabolites on the DAT occur independently of its activity as selective estrogen receptor modulators. This work suggests that tamoxifen is inhibiting DAT function through a previously unidentified mechanism.We demonstrate for the first time that the breast cancer therapeutic tamoxifen and its major metabolites, 4âhydroxytamoxifen and endoxifen, inhibit dopamine transporter function, possibly through an allosteric interaction with the transporter. We demonstrate that these effects occur independently of any activity at the estrogen receptors. This work suggests a previously unidentified mechanism for tamoxifen that may have clinical implications.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136525/1/jnc13955_am.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136525/2/jnc13955.pd
Simple transporter trafficking model for amphetamine-induced dopamine efflux
Amphetamine and its derivatives are important drugs of abuse causing both short-term excitatory and long-term addictive effects. The short-term excitatory effects are linked to amphetamine's ability to maintain high levels of dopamine (DA) outside the cell both by inhibiting DA reuptake after synaptic transmission and by enhancing the efflux of DA from the dopaminergic cells. The molecular mechanisms by which amphetamine elicits the efflux of DA and similar monoamines are still unclear. Recent literature data suggest that trafficking of the monoamine transporters is a phenomenon that underlies observed changes in amphetamine-induced monoamine reuptake and efflux. We develop an ordinary differential equation model incorporating the diverse mechanistic details behind amphetamine-induced DA efflux and demonstrate its utility in describing our experimental data. We also demonstrate an experimental method to track the time-varying concentration of membrane-bound transporter molecules from the DA efflux data. The good fit between our model and the experimental data supports the hypothesis that amphetamine-induced transporter trafficking is necessary to produce extended efflux of DA. This model can explain the relative significance of different processes associated with DA efflux at different times and at different concentration ranges of amphetamine and DA. Synapse 61:500â514, 2007. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/56075/1/20390_ftp.pd
N-Terminal Phosphorylation of the Dopamine Transporter Is Required for Amphetamine-Induced Efflux
Amphetamine (AMPH) elicits its behavioral effects by acting on the dopamine (DA) transporter (DAT) to induce DA efflux into the synaptic cleft. We previously demonstrated that a human DAT construct in which the first 22 amino acids were truncated was not phosphorylated by activation of protein kinase C, in contrast to wild-type (WT) DAT, which was phosphorylated. Nonetheless, in all functions tested to date, which include uptake, inhibitor binding, oligomerization, and redistribution away from the cell surface in response to protein kinase C activation, the truncated DAT was indistinguishable from the full-length WT DAT. Here, however, we show that in HEK-293 cells stably expressing an N-terminal-truncated DAT (del-22 DAT), AMPH-induced DA efflux is reduced by approximately 80%, whether measured by superfusion of a population of cells or by amperometry combined with the patch-clamp technique in the whole cell configuration. We further demonstrate in a full-length DAT construct that simultaneous mutation of the five N-terminal serine residues to alanine (S/A) produces the same phenotype as del-22ânormal uptake but dramatically impaired efflux. In contrast, simultaneous mutation of these same five serines to aspartate (S/D) to simulate phosphorylation results in normal AMPH-induced DA efflux and uptake. In the S/A background, the single mutation to Asp of residue 7 or residue 12 restored a significant fraction of WT efflux, whereas mutation to Asp of residues 2, 4, or 13 was without significant effect on efflux. We propose that phosphorylation of one or more serines in the N-terminus of human DAT, most likely Ser7 or Ser12, is essential for AMPH-induced DAT-mediated DA efflux. Quite surprisingly, N-terminal phosphorylation shifts DAT from a âreluctantâ state to a âwillingâ state for AMPH-induced DA efflux, without affecting inward transport. These data raise the therapeutic possibility of interfering selectively with AMPH-induced DA efflux without altering physiological DA uptake
Repeated amphetamine treatment induces neurite outgrowth and enhanced amphetamine-stimulated dopamine release in rat pheochromocytoma cells (PC12 cells) via a protein kinase C- and mitogen activated protein kinase-dependent mechanism
Repeated intermittent treatment with amphetamine (AMPH) induces both neurite outgrowth and enhanced AMPH-stimulated dopamine (DA) release in PC12 cells. We investigated the role of protein kinases in the induction of these AMPH-mediated events by using inhibitors of protein kinase C (PKC), mitogen activated protein kinase (MAP kinase) or protein kinase A (PKA). PKC inhibitors chelerythrine (100ânm and 300ânm), Ro31-8220 (300ânm) and the MAP kinase kinase inhibitor, PD98059 (30â”m) inhibited the ability of AMPH to elicit both neurite outgrowth and the enhanced AMPH-stimulated DA release. The direct-acting PKC activator, 12- O -tetradecanoyl phorbol 13-acetate (TPA, 250ânm) mimicked the ability of AMPH to elicit neurite outgrowth and enhanced DA release. On the contrary, a selective PKA inhibitor, 100â”m Rp-8-Br-cAMPS, blocked only the development of AMPH-stimulated DA release but not the neurite outgrowth. Treatment of the cells with acute AMPH elicited an increase in the activity of PKC and MAP kinase but not PKA. These results demonstrated that AMPH-induced increases in MAP kinase and PKC are important for induction of both the enhancement in transporter-mediated DA release and neurite outgrowth but PKA was only required for the enhancement in AMPH-stimulated DA release. Therefore the mechanisms by which AMPH induces neurite outgrowth and the enhancement in AMPH-stimulated DA release can be differentiated.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66040/1/j.1471-4159.2003.02127.x.pd
Inhibitory effect of glucose and adenosine 3',5'-monophosphate on the synthesis of inducible N-acetylglucosamine catabolic enzymes in yeast
Glucose can block the utilization of N-acetylglucosamine in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a facultative aerobe, but not in Candida albicans, an obligatory aerobe. Furthermore, glucose represses the synthesis of the enzymes of the N-acetylglucosamine catabolic pathway in S. cerevisiae, but not in C. albicans. The results suggest that catabolite repression is present in S. cerevisiae, but not in C. albicans. Cyclic AMP added to S. cerevisiae cells maintained in a glucose medium cannot bring about their release from catabolite repression. On the contrary, the synthesis of inducible enzymes of N-acetylglucosamine pathway was inhibited by cyclic AMP in both the yeasts. This seems to indicate that cyclic AMP can penetrate into the yeast cells. Furthermore, cyclic AMP inhibits protein synthesis, suggesting that protein synthesis in yeast is under cyclic AMP control
Site-Directed Mutations near Transmembrane Domain 1 Alter Conformation and Function of Norepinephrine and Dopamine Transporters
The human dopamine and norepinephrine transporters (hDAT and hNET, respectively) control neurotransmitter levels within the synaptic cleft and are the site of action for amphetamine (AMPH) and cocaine. We investigated the role of a threonine residue within the highly conserved and putative phosphorylation sequence RETW, located just before transmembrane domain 1, in regulating hNET and hDAT function. The Thr residue was mutated to either alanine or aspartate. Similar to the inward facing T62D-hDAT, T58D-hNET demonstrated reduced [3H]DA uptake but enhanced basal DA efflux compared with hNET with no further effect of AMPH. The mutations had profound effects on substrate function and binding. The potency of substrates to inhibit [3H]DA uptake and compete with radioligand binding was increased in TâA and/or TâD mutants. Substrates, but not inhibitors, demonstrated temperature-sensitive effects of binding. Neither the functional nor the binding potency for hNET blockers was altered from wild type in hNET mutants. There was, however, a significant reduction in potency for cocaine and benztropine to inhibit [3H]DA uptake in T62D-hDAT compared with hDAT. The potency of these drugs to inhibit [3H](â)-2-ÎČ-carbomethoxy-3-ÎČ-(4-fluorophenyl)tropane-1,5-napthalenedisulfonate (WIN35,428) binding was not increased, demonstrating a discordance between functional and binding site effects. Taken together, these results concur with the notion that the TâD mutation in RETW alters the preferred conformation of both hNET and hDAT to favor one that is more inward facing. Although substrate activity and binding are primarily altered in this conformation, the function of inhibitors with distinct structural characteristics may also be affected
A Juxtamembrane Mutation in the N Terminus of the Dopamine Transporter Induces Preference for an Inward-Facing Conformation
The human dopamine transporter (hDAT) regulates synaptic dopamine (DA)
levels and is the site of action of abused and therapeutic drugs. Here we
study the effect of a threonine residue (Thr62 in hDAT) that is highly
conserved within a canonical phosphorylation site (RETW) in the juxtamembrane
N-terminal region of monoamine transporters. In stably transfected human
embryonic kidney 293T cells, expression of T62D-hDAT was reduced compared with
hDAT or T62A-hDAT. T62D-hDAT displayed dramatically reduced
[3H]dopamine up-take but exhibited a higher basal dopamine efflux
compared with hDAT or T62A-hDAT, as determined by measurements of
[3H]dopamine efflux and amperometry. The high constitutive efflux
in T62D-hDAT precluded the measurement of amphetamine-stimulated
[3H]dopamine efflux, but when dopamine was added internally into
voltage-clamped T62D-hDAT cells, amphetamine-induced efflux comparable with
hDAT was detected by amperometry. In accordance with findings that
Zn2+ can rescue reduced DA uptake in mutant transporters that are
predominantly inward-facing, micromolar concentrations of Zn2+
markedly potentiated [3H]dopamine uptake in T62D-hDAT and permitted
the measurement of amphetamine-stimulated dopamine efflux. These results
suggest that T62D-hDAT prefers an inward-facing conformation in the transition
between inward- and outward-facing conformations. For T62A-hDAT, however, the
measured 50% reduction in both [3H]dopamine uptake and
[3H]dopamine efflux was consistent with a slowed transition between
inward- and outward-facing conformations. The mechanism underlying the
important functional role of Thr62 in hDAT activity suggested by these
findings is examined in a structural context using dynamic simulations of a
three-dimensional molecular model of DAT
N-Terminal Truncation of DAT Reduces AMPH-Induced Currents and DA Efflux
<div><p>Cells were voltage clamped with a whole-cell patch pipette while an amperometric electrode was placed onto the cell membrane. The internal solution of the whole-cell patch pipette contained 2 mM DA.</p>
<p>(A) Representative trace of AMPH-induced whole-cell current obtained from FLAG-DAT cells upon AMPH (10 ÎŒM) bath application. The membrane potential of the cell was stepped to +100mV from a holding potential of â20 mV.</p>
<p>(B) Oxidation current acquired concomitantly to the whole-cell current represented in panel A.</p>
<p>(C and D) Representative current traces (whole-cell and amperometric, respectively) obtained from FLAG-del22-DAT cells using the same experimental protocol as in (A) and (B).</p></div