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Vol. 60, Issue 3, 462-473, September 2001
-Dependent
Transporter for Catecholamines, Identified as a Norepinephrine
Transporter, Is Expressed in the Brain of the Teleost Fish Medaka
(Oryzias latipes)
Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Médicale (INSERM) U-513, Faculté de Médecine de
Créteil, Créteil, France (C.R., C.S., B.G.); INSERM U-288,
Paris, France (C.R., C.S., B.G.); and Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique Unité Propre de Recherche 2197, Institut de
Neurobiologie Alfred Fessard, Gif-sur-Yvette, France (M.K., P.V., F.B.)
We report the isolation, functional characterization, and localization
of a Na+/Cl
-dependent catecholamine
transporter (meNET) present in the brain of the teleost fish medaka.
This carrier is very similar to the human neuronal norepinephrine
transporter (NET) and the human neuronal dopamine transporter (DAT),
showing 70 and 64% amino acid identity, respectively. When expressed
in COS-7 cells, this transporter mediates the high-affinity uptake of
dopamine (KM = 290 nM) and
norepinephrine (KM = 640 nM). Its
pharmacological profile reveals more similarities with NET, including a
high affinity for the tricyclic antidepressants desipramine
(IC50 = 0.92 nM) and nortriptyline
(IC50 = 16 nM). In situ hybridization on the medaka
brain shows that meNET mRNA is present only in a subset of tyrosine
hydroxylase-positive neurons found in the noradrenergic areas of the
hindbrain, such as the locus ceruleus and area postrema. None of
the dopaminergic areas anterior to the isthmus contains any labeled
neurons. Neither reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction with
degenerate primers specific for
-aminobutyric acid
transporter/NET nor autoradiographic experiments with
[125I]3b-(4-iodophenyl)-tropane-2b-carboxylic acid methyl
ester revealed an additional catecholamine transporter in the medaka
brain. Uptake experiments with medaka brain synaptosomes show an
endogenous transport with a pharmacological profile identical to that
of the recombinant meNET. Thus, meNET is probably the predominant
if not the only
catecholamine transporter in the medaka fish brain. In
view of the highly conserved primary structures and pharmacological properties of meNET, it is tempting to speculate that a specific dopamine transport developed later in vertebrate evolution and probably
accompanied the tremendous enlargement of the meso-telencephalic dopaminergic pathways in amniotes.
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