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    Date Issued2008 (2)Author
    Boudanova, Ekaterina (2)
    Melikian, Haley E. (2)Navaroli, Deanna M. (2)Stevens, Zachary H. (1)UMass Chan AffiliationBrudnick Neuropsychiatric Research Institute (2)Department of Psychiatry (2)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (2)Melikian Lab (2)Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordLife Sciences (2)Medicine and Health Sciences (2)Amphetamine; Animals; Dopamine; Dopamine Plasma Membrane Transport Proteins; Dopamine Uptake Inhibitors; Endocytosis; Enzyme Inhibitors; Gene Expression Regulation; Mutagenesis; PC12 Cells; Protein Kinase C; Protein Transport; Rats; Time Factors; Transfection (1)View MoreJournalMolecular and cellular neurosciences (1)Neuropharmacology (1)

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    Dopamine transporter endocytic determinants: carboxy terminal residues critical for basal and PKC-stimulated internalization

    Boudanova, Ekaterina; Navaroli, Deanna M.; Stevens, Zachary H.; Melikian, Haley E. (2008-07-22)
    Dopamine (DA) reuptake terminates dopaminergic neurotransmission and is mediated by DA transporters (DATs). Acute protein kinase C (PKC) activation accelerates DAT internalization rates, thereby reducing DAT surface expression. Basal DAT endocytosis and PKC-stimulated DAT functional downregulation rely on residues within the 587-596 region, although whether PKC-induced DAT downregulation reflects transporter endocytosis mechanisms linked to those controlling basal endocytosis rates is unknown. Here, we define residues governing basal and PKC-stimulated DAT endocytosis. Alanine substituting DAT residues 587-590 1) abolished PKC stimulation of DAT endocytosis, and 2) markedly accelerated basal DAT internalization, comparable to that of wildtype DAT during PKC activation. Accelerated basal DAT internalization relied specifically on residues 588-590, which are highly conserved among SLC6 neurotransmitter transporters. Our results support a model whereby residues within the 587-590 stretch may serve as a locus for a PKC-sensitive braking mechanism that tempers basal DAT internalization rates.
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    Amphetamine-induced decreases in dopamine transporter surface expression are protein kinase C-independent

    Boudanova, Ekaterina; Navaroli, Deanna M.; Melikian, Haley E. (2008-01-01)
    Amphetamine (AMPH) is a potent dopamine (DA) transporter (DAT) inhibitor that markedly increases extracellular DA levels. In addition to its actions as a DAT antagonist, acute AMPH exposure induces DAT losses from the plasma membrane, implicating transporter-specific membrane trafficking in amphetamine's actions. Despite reports that AMPH modulates DAT surface expression, the trafficking mechanisms leading to this effect are currently not defined. We recently reported that DAT residues 587-596 play an integral role in constitutive and protein kinase C (PKC)-accelerated DAT internalization. In the current study, we tested whether the structural determinants required for PKC-stimulated DAT internalization are necessary for AMPH-induced DAT sequestration. Acute amphetamine exposure increased DAT endocytic rates, but DAT carboxy terminal residues 587-590, which are required for PKC-stimulated internalization, were not required for AMPH-accelerated DAT endocytosis. AMPH decreased DAT endocytic recycling, but did not modulate transferrin receptor recycling, suggesting that AMPH does not globally diminish endocytic recycling. Finally, treatment with a PKC inhibitor demonstrated that AMPH-induced DAT losses from the plasma membrane were not dependent upon PKC activity. These results suggest that the mechanisms responsible for AMPH-mediated DAT internalization are independent from those governing PKC-sensitive DAT endocytosis.
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