Multiple ionic conductances of the human dopamine transporter: the actions of dopamine and psychostimulants

MS Sonders, SJ Zhu, NR Zahniser… - Journal of …, 1997 - Soc Neuroscience
MS Sonders, SJ Zhu, NR Zahniser, MP Kavanaugh, SG Amara
Journal of Neuroscience, 1997Soc Neuroscience
Electrophysiological and pharmacological studies of a cloned human dopamine transporter
(hDAT) were undertaken to investigate the mechanisms of transporter function and the
actions of drugs at this target. Using two-electrode voltage-clamp techniques with hDAT-
expressing Xenopus laevis oocytes, we show that hDAT can be considered electrogenic by
two criteria.(1) Uptake of hDAT substrates gives rise to a pharmacologically appropriate
“transport-associated” current.(2) The velocity of DA uptake measured in oocytes clamped at …
Electrophysiological and pharmacological studies of a cloned human dopamine transporter (hDAT) were undertaken to investigate the mechanisms of transporter function and the actions of drugs at this target. Using two-electrode voltage-clamp techniques with hDAT-expressing Xenopus laevis oocytes, we show that hDAT can be considered electrogenic by two criteria. (1) Uptake of hDAT substrates gives rise to a pharmacologically appropriate “transport-associated” current. (2) The velocity of DA uptake measured in oocytes clamped at various membrane potentials was voltage-dependent, increasing with hyperpolarization. Concurrent measurement of transport-associated current and substrate flux in individual oocytes revealed that charge movement during substrate translocation was greater than would be expected for a transport mechanism with fixed stoichiometry of 2 Na+ and 1 Cl per DA+ molecule. In addition to the transport-associated current, hDAT also mediates a constitutive leak current, the voltage and ionic dependencies of which differ markedly from those of the transport-associated current. Ion substitution experiments suggest that alkali cations and protons are carried by the hDAT leak conductance. In contrast to the transport-associated functions, the leak does not require Na+ or Cl, and DAT ligands readily interact with the transporter even in the absence of these ions. The currents that hDAT mediates provide a functional assay that readily distinguishes the modes of action of amphetamine-like “DA-releasing” drugs from cocaine-like translocation blockers. In addition, the voltage dependence of DA uptake suggests a mechanism through which presynaptic DA autoreceptor activation may accelerate the termination of dopaminergic neurotransmission in vivo.
Soc Neuroscience