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1.
Neurotransmission depends on the regulated release of chemical transmitter molecules. This requires the packaging of these substances into the specialized secretory vesicles of neurons and neuroendocrine cells, a process mediated by specific vesicular transporters. The family of genes encoding the vesicular transporters for biogenic amines and acetylcholine have recently been cloned. Direct comparison of their transport characteristics and pharmacology provides information about vesicular transport bioenergetics, substrate feature recognition by each transporter, and the role of vesicular amine storage in the mechanism of action of psychopharmacologic and neurotoxic agents. Regulation of vesicular transport activity may affect levels of neurotransmitter available for neurosecretion and be an important site for the regulation of synaptic function. Gene knockout studies have determined vesicular transport function is critical for survival and have enabled further evaluation of the role of vesicular neurotransmitter transporters in behavior and neurotoxicity. Molecular analysis is beginning to reveal the sites involved in vesicular transporter function and the sites that determine substrate specificity. In addition, the molecular basis for the selective targeting of these transporters to specific vesicle populations and the biogenesis of monoaminergic and cholinergic synaptic vesicles are areas of research that are currently being explored. This information provides new insights into the pharmacology and physiology of biogenic amine and acetylcholine vesicular storage in cardiovascular, endocrine, and central nervous system function and has important implications for neurodegenerative disease.  相似文献   

2.
J D Erickson  H Varoqui 《FASEB journal》2000,14(15):2450-2458
Vesicular transporters are responsible for the loading of neurotransmitters into specialized secretory organelles in neurons and neuroendocrine cells to make them available for regulated neurosecretion. The exocytotic release of neurotransmitter therefore depends on the functional activity of the vesicular transporters and their efficient sorting to these secretory organelles. Molecular analysis of vesicular transport proteins has revealed important information regarding structural domains responsible for their functional properties, including substrate specificity and trafficking to various classes of secretory vesicles. These studies have established the existence of an important functional relationship between transporter activity and presynaptic quantal neurosecretion.  相似文献   

3.
Transport mechanisms in acetylcholine and monoamine storage.   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
S M Parsons 《FASEB journal》2000,14(15):2423-2434
Sequence-related vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) and vesicular monoamine transporter (VMAT) transport neurotransmitter substrates into secretory vesicles. This review seeks to identify shared and differentiated aspects of the transport mechanisms. VAChT and VMAT exchange two protons per substrate molecule with very similar initial velocity kinetics and pH dependencies. However, vesicular gradients of ACh in vivo are much smaller than the driving force for uptake and vesicular gradients of monoamines, suggesting the existence of a regulatory mechanism in ACh storage not found in monoamine storage. The importance of microscopic rather than macroscopic kinetics in structure-function analysis is described. Transporter regions affecting binding or translocation of substrates, inhibitors, and protons have been found with photoaffinity labeling, chimeras, and single-site mutations. VAChT and VMAT exhibit partial structural and mechanistic homology with lactose permease, which belongs to the same sequence-defined superfamily, despite opposite directions of substrate transport. The vesicular transporters translocate the first proton using homologous aspartates in putative transmembrane domain X (ten), but they translocate the second proton using unknown residues that might not be conserved between them. Comparative analysis of the VAChT and VMAT transport mechanisms will aid understanding of regulation in neurotransmitter storage.  相似文献   

4.
Gasnier B 《Biochimie》2000,82(4):327-337
Classical (non-peptide) transmitters are stored into secretory vesicles by a secondary active transporter driven by a V-type H(+)-ATPase. Five vesicular neurotransmitter uptake activities have been characterized in vitro and, for three of them, the transporters involved have been identified at the molecular level using cDNA cloning and/or Caenorhabditis elegans genetics. These transporters belong to two protein families, which are both unrelated to the Na(+)-coupled neurotransmitter transporters operating at the plasma membrane. The two isoforms of the mammalian vesicular monoamine transporter, VMAT1 and VMAT2, are related to the vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VACHT), while a novel, unrelated vesicular inhibitory amino acid transporter (VIAAT), also designated vesicular GABA transporter (VGAT), is responsible for the storage of GABA, glycine or, at some synapses, both amino acids into synaptic vesicles. The observed effects of experimentally altered levels of VACHT or VMAT2 on synaptic transmission and behavior, as well as the recent awareness that GABAergic or glutamatergic receptors are not always saturated at central synapses, suggest a potential role of vesicular loading in synaptic plasticity.  相似文献   

5.
Neurotransmitters are key molecules of neurotransmission. They are concentrated first in the cytosol and then in small synaptic vesicles of presynaptic terminals by the activity of specific neurotransmitter transporters of the plasma and the vesicular membrane, respectively. It has been shown that postsynaptic responses to single neurotransmitter packets vary over a wide range, which may be due to a regulation of vesicular neurotransmitter filling. Vesicular filling depends on the availability of transmitter molecules in the cytoplasm and the active transport into secretory vesicles relying on a proton gradient. In addition, it is modulated by vesicle-associated heterotrimeric G proteins, Go2 and Gq, which regulate VMAT activities in brain and platelets, respectively, and may also be involved in the regulation of VGLUTs. It appears that the vesicular content activates the G protein, suggesting a signal transduction form the luminal site which might be mediated by a vesicular G-protein coupled receptor or, as an alternative, possibly by the transporter itself. These novel functions of G proteins in the control of transmitter storage may link regulation of the vesicular content to intracellular signal cascades.  相似文献   

6.
Omote H  Miyaji T  Juge N  Moriyama Y 《Biochemistry》2011,50(25):5558-5565
Glutamate plays essential roles in chemical transmission as a major excitatory neurotransmitter. The accumulation of glutamate in secretory vesicles is mediated by vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUTs) that together with the driving electrochemical gradient of proteins influence the subsequent quantum release of glutamate and the function of higher-order neurons. The vesicular content of glutamate is well correlated with membrane potential (Δψ), which suggests that Δψ determines the vesicular glutamate concentration. The transport of glutamate into secretory vesicles is highly dependent on Cl(-). This anion stimulates glutamate transport but is inhibitory at higher concentrations. Accumulating evidence indicates that Cl(-) regulates glutamate transport through control of VGLUT activity and the H(+) electrochemical gradient. Recently, a comprehensive study demonstrated that Cl(-) regulation of VGLUT is competitively inhibited by metabolic intermediates such as ketone bodies. It also showed that ketone bodies are effective in controlling epilepsy. These results suggest a correlation between metabolic state and higher-order brain function. We propose a novel function for Cl(-) as a fundamental regulator for signal transmission.  相似文献   

7.
Neurotransmitter transporters are essential components in the recycling of neurotransmitters released during neuronal activity. These transporters are the targets for important drugs affecting mood and behavior. They fall into at least four gene families, two encoding proteins in the plasma membrane and two in the synaptic vesicle membrane, although the known vesicular transporters have not all been cloned. Each of these transporters works by coupling the downhill movement of small ions such as Na+, Cl, K+, and H+ to the uphill transport of neurotransmitter. Plasma membrane transporters move the transmitter into the cytoplasm by cotransport with Na+. Many transporters also couple Cl cotransport to transmitter influx and these all belong to the NaCl-coupled family, although within the family the coupling stoichiometry can vary. Transporters for glutamate couple influx of this excitatory amino acid to Na+ and H+ influx and K+ efflux. Transporters in synaptic vesicles couple H+ efflux to neurotransmitter transport from the cytoplasm to the vesicle lumen.  相似文献   

8.
Vesicular neurotransmitter transporters are required for the storage of all classical and amino acid neurotransmitters in secretory vesicles. Transporter expression can influence neurotransmitter storage and release, and trafficking targets the transporters to different types of secretory vesicles. Vesicular transporters traffic to synaptic vesicles (SVs) as well as large dense core vesicles and are recycled to SVs at the nerve terminal. Some of the intrinsic signals for these trafficking events have been defined and include a dileucine motif present in multiple transporter subtypes, an acidic cluster in the neural isoform of the vesicular monoamine transporter (VMAT) 2 and a polyproline motif in the vesicular glutamate transporter (VGLUT) 1. The sorting of VMAT2 and the vesicular acetylcholine transporter to secretory vesicles is regulated by phosphorylation. In addition, VGLUT1 uses alternative endocytic pathways for recycling back to SVs following exocytosis. Regulation of these sorting events has the potential to influence synaptic transmission and behavior.  相似文献   

9.
Vesicular transporters are required for the storage of?all classical and amino acid neurotransmitters in synaptic vesicles. Some neurons lack known vesicular transporters, suggesting additional neurotransmitter systems remain unidentified. Insect mushroom bodies (MBs) are critical for several behaviors, including learning, but the neurotransmitters released by the intrinsic Kenyon cells (KCs) remain unknown. Likewise, KCs do not express a known vesicular transporter. We report the identification of a novel Drosophila gene portabella (prt) that is structurally similar to known vesicular transporters. Both larval and adult brains express PRT in the KCs of the MBs. Additional PRT cells project to the central complex and optic ganglia. prt mutation causes an olfactory learning deficit and an unusual defect in the male's position during copulation that is rescued by expression in KCs. Because prt is expressed in neurons that lack other known vesicular transporters or neurotransmitters, it may define a previously unknown neurotransmitter system responsible for sexual behavior and a component of olfactory learning.  相似文献   

10.
Krantz DE 《Neuron》2006,49(1):1-2
Vesicular neurotransmitter transporters package transmitter into the lumen of synaptic vesicles for quantal release. However, the number of transporters that localize to each vesicle is not known. In this issue of Neuron, a study by Daniels et al. using the Drosophila neuromuscular junction and mutations of the vesicular glutamate transporter suggests that one transporter may suffice to fill each vesicle.  相似文献   

11.
Synaptic strength depends on the amount of neurotransmitter stored in synaptic vesicles. The vesicular transmitter content has recently been shown to be directly dependent on the expression levels of vesicular neurotransmitter transporters indicating that the transport capacity of synaptic vesicles is a critical determinant for synaptic efficacy. Using synaptic vesicles prepared from whole brain at different times of the day we now show that the amount of vesicular glutamate transporter (VGLUT) 1 undergoes strong diurnal cycling. VGLUT1 protein levels are high before the start of the light period, decline at noon, increase again before start of the dark period, and decline again at midnight. Mice kept in complete darkness showed within a 24-h period only a single peak of VGLUT1 expression in the middle of the rest phase. In contrast, mice lacking the period gene Period 2, a core component of the circadian clock, did not show any light-cycle-dependent changes of VGLUT1 levels. No other of several synaptic vesicle proteins examined underwent circadian cycling. Circadian cycling of VGLUT1 was not seen when analyzing homogenate or synaptosomes, the starting fraction for vesicle preparation. Circadian cycling of VGLUT1 was also not reflected at the mRNA level. We conclude that nerve terminals are endowed with mechanisms that regulate quantal size by changing the copy number of transporters in synaptic vesicles. A reduced amount of VGLUT1 per vesicle is probably achieved by means of selective sorting controlled by clock genes.  相似文献   

12.
Originally identified as transporters for inorganic phosphate, solute carrier 17 (SLC17) family proteins subserve diverse physiological roles. The vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUTs) package the principal excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate into synaptic vesicles (SVs). In contrast, the closely related sialic acid transporter sialin mediates the flux of sialic acid in the opposite direction, from lysosomes to the cytoplasm. The two proteins couple in different ways to the H+ electrochemical gradient driving force, and high-resolution structures of the Escherichia coli homolog d-galactonate transporter (DgoT) and more recently rat VGLUT2 now begin to suggest the mechanisms involved as well as the basis for substrate specificity.  相似文献   

13.
The neurotransmitter transporters belonging to the solute carrier 6 (SLC6) family, including the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GAT), norepinephrine (NET), serotonin (SERT) and dopamine (DAT) transporters are extremely important drug targets of great clinical relevance. These Na+, Cl(-)-dependent transporters primarily function following neurotransmission to reset neuronal signaling by transporting neurotransmitter out of the synapse and back into the pre-synaptic neuron. Recent studies have tracked down an elusive binding site for Cl(-) that facilitates neurotransmitter transport using structural differences evident with bacterial family members (e.g., the Aquifex aeolicus leucine transporter LeuT Aa) that lack Cl(-) dependence. Additionally, the crystal structures of antidepressant-bound LeuT Aa reveals a surprising mode of drug interaction that may have relevance for medication development. The study of sequence and structural divergence between LeuT Aa and human SLC6 family transporters can thus inform us as to how and why neurotransmitter transporters evolved a reliance on extracellular Cl(-) to propel the transport cycle; what residue changes and helical rearrangements give rise to recognition of different substrates; and how drugs such as antidepressants, cocaine, and amphetamines halt (or reverse) the transport process.  相似文献   

14.
Supplisson S  Roux MJ 《FEBS letters》2002,529(1):93-101
In the brain, neurons and glial cells compete for the uptake of the fast neurotransmitters, glutamate, GABA and glycine, through specific transporters. The relative contributions of glia and neurons to the neurotransmitter uptake depend on the kinetic properties, thermodynamic coupling and density of transporters but also on the intracellular metabolization or sequestration of the neurotransmitter. In the case of glycine, which is both an inhibitory transmitter and a neuromodulator of the excitatory glutamatergic transmission as a co-agonist of N-methyl D-aspartate receptors, the glial (GlyT1b) and neuronal (GlyT2a) transporters differ at least in three aspects: (i) stoichiometries, (ii) reverse uptake capabilities and (iii) pre-steady-state kinetics. A 3 Na(+)/1 Cl(-)/gly stoichiometry was established for GlyT2a on the basis of a 2 charges/glycine flux ratio and changes in the reversal potential of the transporter current as a function of the extracellular glycine, Na(+) and Cl(-) concentrations. Therefore, the driving force available for glycine uphill transport in neurons is about two orders of magnitude larger than for glial cells. In addition, GlyT2a shows a severe limitation for reverse uptake, which suggests an essential role of GlyT2a in maintaining a high intracellular glycine pool, thus facilitating the refilling of synaptic vesicles by the low affinity, low specificity vesicular transporter VGAT/VIAAT. In contrast, the 2 Na(+)/1 Cl(-)/gly stoichiometry and bi-directional transport properties of GlyT1b are appropriate for the control of the extracellular glycine concentration in a submicromolar range that can modulate N-methyl D-aspartate receptors effectively. Finally, analysis of the pre-steady-state kinetics of GlyT1b and GlyT2a revealed that at the resting potential neuronal transporters are preferentially oriented outward, ready to bind glycine, which suggests a kinetic advantage in the uptake contest.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract: The pharmacokinetics of [11CJtetrabenazine, a high-affinity radioligand for the monoamine vesicular transporter, were determined in living human brain using in vivo imaging by positron emission tomography (PET). The radiotracer showed high brain uptake and rapid washout from all brain regions with relatively slower clearance from regions of highest concentrations of monoamine vesicular transporters (striatum), resulting in clear differential visualization of these structures at short intervals after injection (10–20 min). As the first human PET imaging study of a vesicular neurotransmitter transporter, these experiments demonstrate that external imaging of vesicular transporters forms a new and valuable approach to the in vivo quantification of monoaminergic neurons, with potential application to the in vivo study of neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

16.
Many psychoactive drugs influence the transport of neurotransmitters across biological membranes, suggesting that the physiological regulation of neurotransmitter transport might contribute to normal and perhaps abnormal behaviour. Over the past few years, molecular characterization of the neurotransmitter transporters has enabled investigation of their subcellular location and regulation. The analysis of location suggests that membrane trafficking has an important role in the normal function of these proteins. One of the major regulatory mechanisms also involves changes in localization that might contribute to synaptic plasticity. This article discusses recent work on the membrane trafficking of neurotransmitter transporters and its role in regulating their activity.  相似文献   

17.
The physiological functions of neurotransmitter:sodium symporters (NSS) in reuptake of neurotransmitters from the synapse into the presynaptic nerve have been shown to be complemented by their involvement, together with non-plasma membrane neurotransmitter transporters, in the reverse transport of substrate (efflux) in response to psychostimulants. Recent experimental evidence implicates highly anionic phosphatidylinositol 4,5-biphosphate (PIP2) lipids in such functions of the serotonin (SERT) and dopamine (DAT) transporters. Thus, for both SERT and DAT, neurotransmitter efflux has been shown to be strongly regulated by the presence of PIP2 lipids in the plasma membrane, and the electrostatic interaction of the N-terminal region of DAT with the negatively charged PIP2 lipids. We examine the experimentally established phenotypes in a structural context obtained from computational modeling based on recent crystallographic data. The results are shown to set the stage for a mechanistic understanding of physiological actions of neurotransmitter transporters in the NSS family of membrane proteins. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Lipid–protein interactions.  相似文献   

18.
J B Rand  J S Duerr  D L Frisby 《FASEB journal》2000,14(15):2414-2422
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans has a number of advantages for the analysis of synaptic molecules. These include a simple nervous system in which all cells are identified and synaptic connectivity is known and reproducible, a large collection of mutants and powerful methods of genetic analysis, simple methods for the generation and analysis of transgenic animals, and a number of relatively simple quantifiable behaviors. Studies in C. elegans have made major contributions to our understanding of vesicular transmitter transporters. Two of the four classes of vesicular transporters so far identified (VAChT and VGAT) were first described and cloned in C. elegans; in both cases, the genes were first identified and cloned by means of mutations causing a suggestive phenotype (1, 2). The phenotypes of eat-4 mutants and the cell biology of the EAT-4 protein were critical in the identification of this protein as the vesicular glutamate transporter (3, 4). In addition, the unusual gene structure associated with the cholinergic locus was first described in C. elegans (5). The biochemical properties of the nematode transporters are surprisingly similar to their vertebrate counterparts, and they can be assayed under similar conditions using the same types of mammalian cells (6, 7). In addition, mild and severe mutants (including knockouts) are available for each of the four C. elegans vesicular transporters, which has permitted a careful evaluation of the role(s) of vesicular transport in transmitter-specific behaviors. Accordingly, it seems appropriate at this time to present the current status of the field. In this review, we will first discuss the properties of C. elegans vesicular transporters and transporter mutants, and then explore some of the lessons and insights C. elegans research has provided to the field of vesicular transport.  相似文献   

19.
Previously we demonstrated the existence of a physical and functional interaction between the glycine transporters and the SNARE protein syntaxin 1. In the present report the physiological role of the syntaxin 1-glycine transporter 2 (GLYT2) interaction has been investigated by using a brain-derived preparation. Previous studies, focused on syntaxin 1-transporter interactions using overexpression systems, led to the postulation that syntaxin is somehow implicated in protein trafficking. Since syntaxin 1 is involved in exocytosis of neurotransmitter and also interacts with GLYT2, we stimulated exocytosis in synaptosomes and examined its effect on surface-expression and transport activity of GLYT2. We found that, under conditions that stimulate vesicular glycine release, GLYT2 is rapidly trafficked first toward the plasma membrane and then internalized. When the same experiments were performed with synaptosomes inactivated for syntaxin 1 by a pretreatment with the neurotoxin Bont/C, GLYT2 was unable to reach the plasma membrane but still was able to leave it. These results indicate the existence of a SNARE-mediated regulatory mechanism that controls the surface-expression of GLYT2. Syntaxin 1 is involved in the arrival to the plasma membrane but not in the retrieval. Furthermore, by using immunogold labeling on purified preparations from synaptosomes, we demonstrate that GLYT2 is present in small synaptic-like vesicles. GLYT2-containing vesicles may represent neurotransmitter transporter that is being trafficked. The results of our work suggest a close correlation between exocytosis of neurotransmitter and its reuptake by transporters.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract: The termination of neurotransmission is achieved by rapid uptake of the released neurotransmitter by specific high-affinity neurotransmitter transporters. Most of these transporters are encoded by a family of genes (Na+/Cl transporters) having a similar membrane topography of 12 transmembrane helices. An evolutionary tree revealed five distinct subfamilies: γ-aminobutyric acid transporters, monoamine transporters, amino acid transporters, "orphan" transporters, and the recently discovered bacterial transporters. The bacterial transporters that belong to this family may help to develop heterologous expression systems with the aim of solving the three-dimensional structure of these membrane proteins. Some of the neurotransmitter transporters have been implicated as important sites for drug action. Monoamine transporters, for example, are targeted by major classes of antidepressants, psychostimulants, and antihypertensive drugs. Localization of individual transporters in specific cells and brain areas is pertinent to understanding their contribution to neurotransmission and their potential as targets for drugs. The most important questions in the field include resolving the mechanism of neurotransmitter transport, the structure of the transporters, and the interaction of each transporter in complex neurological activities.  相似文献   

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