Postendocytic sorting of constitutively internalized dopamine transporter in cell lines and dopaminergic neurons

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Postendocytic sorting of constitutively internalized dopamine transporter in cell lines and dopaminergic neurons. / Eriksen, Jacob; Bjørn-Yoshimoto, Walden Emil; Jørgensen, Trine Nygaard; Newman, Amy Hauck; Gether, Ulrik.

In: Journal of Biological Chemistry, Vol. 285, No. 35, 2010, p. 27289-301.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Eriksen, J, Bjørn-Yoshimoto, WE, Jørgensen, TN, Newman, AH & Gether, U 2010, 'Postendocytic sorting of constitutively internalized dopamine transporter in cell lines and dopaminergic neurons', Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 285, no. 35, pp. 27289-301. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.131003

APA

Eriksen, J., Bjørn-Yoshimoto, W. E., Jørgensen, T. N., Newman, A. H., & Gether, U. (2010). Postendocytic sorting of constitutively internalized dopamine transporter in cell lines and dopaminergic neurons. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 285(35), 27289-301. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.131003

Vancouver

Eriksen J, Bjørn-Yoshimoto WE, Jørgensen TN, Newman AH, Gether U. Postendocytic sorting of constitutively internalized dopamine transporter in cell lines and dopaminergic neurons. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2010;285(35):27289-301. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.131003

Author

Eriksen, Jacob ; Bjørn-Yoshimoto, Walden Emil ; Jørgensen, Trine Nygaard ; Newman, Amy Hauck ; Gether, Ulrik. / Postendocytic sorting of constitutively internalized dopamine transporter in cell lines and dopaminergic neurons. In: Journal of Biological Chemistry. 2010 ; Vol. 285, No. 35. pp. 27289-301.

Bibtex

@article{2999e990b50911df825b000ea68e967b,
title = "Postendocytic sorting of constitutively internalized dopamine transporter in cell lines and dopaminergic neurons",
abstract = "The dopamine transporter (DAT) mediates reuptake of released dopamine and is the target for psychostimulants, such as cocaine and amphetamine. DAT undergoes marked constitutive endocytosis, but little is known about the fate and sorting of the endocytosed transporter. To study DAT sorting in cells lines, we fused the one-transmembrane segment protein Tac to DAT, thereby generating a transporter (TacDAT) with an extracellular antibody epitope suited for trafficking studies. TacDAT was functional and endocytosed constitutively in HEK293 cells. According to an ELISA-based assay, TacDAT intracellular accumulation was increased by the lysosomal protease inhibitor leupeptin and by monensin, an inhibitor of lysosomal degradation and recycling. Monensin also reduced TacDAT surface expression consistent with partial recycling. In both HEK293 cells and in the dopaminergic cell line 1Rb3An27, constitutively internalized TacDAT displayed primary co-localization with the late endosomal marker Rab7, less co-localization with the {"}short loop{"} recycling marker Rab4, and little co-localization with the marker of {"}long loop{"} recycling endosomes, Rab11. Removal by mutation of N-terminal ubiquitination sites did not affect this sorting pattern. The sorting pattern was distinct from a bona fide recycling membrane protein, the beta(2)-adrenergic receptor, that co-localized primarily with Rab11 and Rab4. Constitutively internalized wild type DAT probed with the fluorescently tagged cocaine analogue JHC 1-64, exhibited the same co-localization pattern as TacDAT in 1Rb3An27 cells and in cultured midbrain dopaminergic neurons. We conclude that DAT is constitutively internalized and sorted in a ubiquitination-independent manner to late endosomes/lysosomes and in part to a Rab4 positive short loop recycling pathway.",
author = "Jacob Eriksen and Bj{\o}rn-Yoshimoto, {Walden Emil} and J{\o}rgensen, {Trine Nygaard} and Newman, {Amy Hauck} and Ulrik Gether",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1074/jbc.M110.131003",
language = "English",
volume = "285",
pages = "27289--301",
journal = "Journal of Biological Chemistry",
issn = "0021-9258",
publisher = "American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.",
number = "35",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Postendocytic sorting of constitutively internalized dopamine transporter in cell lines and dopaminergic neurons

AU - Eriksen, Jacob

AU - Bjørn-Yoshimoto, Walden Emil

AU - Jørgensen, Trine Nygaard

AU - Newman, Amy Hauck

AU - Gether, Ulrik

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - The dopamine transporter (DAT) mediates reuptake of released dopamine and is the target for psychostimulants, such as cocaine and amphetamine. DAT undergoes marked constitutive endocytosis, but little is known about the fate and sorting of the endocytosed transporter. To study DAT sorting in cells lines, we fused the one-transmembrane segment protein Tac to DAT, thereby generating a transporter (TacDAT) with an extracellular antibody epitope suited for trafficking studies. TacDAT was functional and endocytosed constitutively in HEK293 cells. According to an ELISA-based assay, TacDAT intracellular accumulation was increased by the lysosomal protease inhibitor leupeptin and by monensin, an inhibitor of lysosomal degradation and recycling. Monensin also reduced TacDAT surface expression consistent with partial recycling. In both HEK293 cells and in the dopaminergic cell line 1Rb3An27, constitutively internalized TacDAT displayed primary co-localization with the late endosomal marker Rab7, less co-localization with the "short loop" recycling marker Rab4, and little co-localization with the marker of "long loop" recycling endosomes, Rab11. Removal by mutation of N-terminal ubiquitination sites did not affect this sorting pattern. The sorting pattern was distinct from a bona fide recycling membrane protein, the beta(2)-adrenergic receptor, that co-localized primarily with Rab11 and Rab4. Constitutively internalized wild type DAT probed with the fluorescently tagged cocaine analogue JHC 1-64, exhibited the same co-localization pattern as TacDAT in 1Rb3An27 cells and in cultured midbrain dopaminergic neurons. We conclude that DAT is constitutively internalized and sorted in a ubiquitination-independent manner to late endosomes/lysosomes and in part to a Rab4 positive short loop recycling pathway.

AB - The dopamine transporter (DAT) mediates reuptake of released dopamine and is the target for psychostimulants, such as cocaine and amphetamine. DAT undergoes marked constitutive endocytosis, but little is known about the fate and sorting of the endocytosed transporter. To study DAT sorting in cells lines, we fused the one-transmembrane segment protein Tac to DAT, thereby generating a transporter (TacDAT) with an extracellular antibody epitope suited for trafficking studies. TacDAT was functional and endocytosed constitutively in HEK293 cells. According to an ELISA-based assay, TacDAT intracellular accumulation was increased by the lysosomal protease inhibitor leupeptin and by monensin, an inhibitor of lysosomal degradation and recycling. Monensin also reduced TacDAT surface expression consistent with partial recycling. In both HEK293 cells and in the dopaminergic cell line 1Rb3An27, constitutively internalized TacDAT displayed primary co-localization with the late endosomal marker Rab7, less co-localization with the "short loop" recycling marker Rab4, and little co-localization with the marker of "long loop" recycling endosomes, Rab11. Removal by mutation of N-terminal ubiquitination sites did not affect this sorting pattern. The sorting pattern was distinct from a bona fide recycling membrane protein, the beta(2)-adrenergic receptor, that co-localized primarily with Rab11 and Rab4. Constitutively internalized wild type DAT probed with the fluorescently tagged cocaine analogue JHC 1-64, exhibited the same co-localization pattern as TacDAT in 1Rb3An27 cells and in cultured midbrain dopaminergic neurons. We conclude that DAT is constitutively internalized and sorted in a ubiquitination-independent manner to late endosomes/lysosomes and in part to a Rab4 positive short loop recycling pathway.

U2 - 10.1074/jbc.M110.131003

DO - 10.1074/jbc.M110.131003

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 20551317

VL - 285

SP - 27289

EP - 27301

JO - Journal of Biological Chemistry

JF - Journal of Biological Chemistry

SN - 0021-9258

IS - 35

ER -

ID: 21701871