1. Super-resolution microscopy reveals functional organization of dopamine transporters into cholesterol and neuronal activity-dependent nanodomains
- Author
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Rahbek-Clemmensen, Troels, Lycas, Matthew D., Erlendsson, Simon, Eriksen, Jacob, Apuschkin, Mia, Vilhardt, Frederik, Jorgensen, Trine N., Hansen, Freja H., Gether, Ulrik, Rahbek-Clemmensen, Troels, Lycas, Matthew D., Erlendsson, Simon, Eriksen, Jacob, Apuschkin, Mia, Vilhardt, Frederik, Jorgensen, Trine N., Hansen, Freja H., and Gether, Ulrik
- Abstract
Dopamine regulates reward, cognition, and locomotor functions. By mediating rapid reuptake of extracellular dopamine, the dopamine transporter is critical for spatiotemporal control of dopaminergic neurotransmission. Here, we use super-resolution imaging to show that the dopamine transporter is dynamically sequestrated into cholesterol-dependent nanodomains in the plasma membrane of presynaptic varicosities and neuronal projections of dopaminergic neurons. Stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy reveals irregular dopamine transporter nanodomains (∼70 nm mean diameter) that were highly sensitive to cholesterol depletion. Live photoactivated localization microscopy shows a similar dopamine transporter membrane organization in live heterologous cells. In neurons, dual-color dSTORM shows that tyrosine hydroxylase and vesicular monoamine transporter-2 are distinctively localized adjacent to, but not overlapping with, the dopamine transporter nanodomains. The molecular organization of the dopamine transporter in nanodomains is reversibly reduced by short-term activation of NMDA-type ionotropic glutamate receptors, implicating dopamine transporter nanodomain distribution as a potential mechanism to modulate dopaminergic neurotransmission in response to excitatory input.
- Published
- 2017