Allosteric Modulation of Human Dopamine Transporter Activity under Conditions Promoting its Dimerization
- Mary Hongying Cheng1,
- Jennie Garcia-Olivares2,
- Steven Wasserman2,
- Jennifer DiPietro2 and
- Ivet Bahar1*
- 1 University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, United States;
- 2 Laboratory of Molecular and Cellular Neurobiology, National Institute of Mental Health, NIH, United States
- ↵* Corresponding author; email: bahar{at}pitt.edu
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Author contributions: IB, MHC and JGO designed the project. MHC performed the modeling and simulations. JGO, SW and JDP did the experiments. MHC, JGO and IB analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript.
Abstract
The human dopamine (DA) transporter (hDAT) is a key regulator of neurotransmission and a target for antidepressants and addictive drugs. Despite the recent resolution of dDAT structures from Drosophila melanogaster, complete understanding of its mechanism of function and even information on its biological assembly is lacking. The resolved dDAT structures are monomeric, but growing evidence suggests that hDAT might function as a multimer, and its oligomerization may be relevant to addictive drug effects. Here, using structure-based computations, we examined the possible mechanisms of hDAT dimerization and its dynamics in a lipid bilayer. Using a combination of site-directed mutagenesis, DA-uptake, and cross-linking experiments that exploited the capacity of Cys306 to form inter-monomeric disulfide bridges in the presence of an oxidizing agent, we tested the effects of mutations at transmembrane segment (TM) 6 and 12 helices in HEK293 cells. The most probable structural model for hDAT dimer suggested by computations and experiments differed from the dimeric structure resolved for the bacterial homolog, LeuT, presumably because of a kink at TM12 preventing favorable monomer packing. Instead, TM2, TM6, and TM11 line the dimer interface. Molecular dynamics simulations of the dimeric hDAT indicated that the two subunits tend to undergo cooperative structural changes, both on local (extracellular gate opening/closure) and global (transition between outward-facing and inward-facing states) scales. These observations suggest that hDAT transport properties may be allosterically modulated under conditions promoting dimerization. Our study provides critical insights into approaches for examining the oligomerization of neurotransmitter transporters to shed light on their drug modulation.
- Received October 16, 2016.
- Accepted June 5, 2017.
- Copyright © 2017, The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology









