Back to Search
Start Over
Identifying dominant-negative actions of a dopamine transporter variant in patients with parkinsonism and neuropsychiatric disease
- Source :
- Herborg , F , Jensen , K L , Tolstoy , S , Arends , N , Posselt , L P , Shekar , A , Aguilar , J , Lund , V K , Erreger , K , Rickhag , M , Lycas , M D , Lonsdale , M N , Rahbek-Clemmensen , T , Sorensen , A T , Newman , A H , Lokkegaard , A , Kjaerulff , O , Werge , T , Moller , L B , Matthies , H J G , Galli , A , Hjermind , L E , Gether , U & IPSYCH Researchers 2021 , ' Identifying dominant-negative actions of a dopamine transporter variant in patients with parkinsonism and neuropsychiatric disease ' , JCI insight , vol. 6 , no. 18 , 151496 .
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Dysfunctional dopaminergic neurotransmission is central to movement disorders and mental diseases. The dopamine transporter (DAT) regulates extracellular dopamine levels, but the genetic and mechanistic link between DAT function and dopamine-related pathologies is not clear. Particularly, the pathophysiological significance of monoallelic missense mutations in DAT is unknown. Here, we use clinical information, neuroimaging, and large-scale exome-sequencing data to uncover the occurrence and phenotypic spectrum of a DAT coding variant, DAT-K619N, which localizes to the critical C-terminal PSD-95/Discs-large/ZO-1 homology-binding motif of human DAT (hDAT). We identified the rare but recurrent hDAT-K619N variant in exome-sequenced samples of patients with neuropsychiatric diseases and a patient with early-onset neurodegenerative parkinsonism and comorbid neuropsychiatric disease. In cell cultures, hDAT-K619N displayed reduced uptake capacity, decreased surface expression, and accelerated turnover. Unilateral expression in mouse nigrostriatal neurons revealed differential effects of hDAT-K619N and hDATWT on dopamine-directed behaviors, and hDAT-K619N expression in Drosophila led to impairments in dopamine transmission with accompanying hyperlocomotion and age-dependent disturbances of the negative geotactic response. Moreover, cellular studies and viral expression of hDAT-K619N in mice demonstrated a dominant-negative effect of the hDAT-K619N mutant. Summarized, our results suggest that hDAT-K619N can effectuate dopamine dysfunction of pathological relevance in a dominant-negative manner.
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- Herborg , F , Jensen , K L , Tolstoy , S , Arends , N , Posselt , L P , Shekar , A , Aguilar , J , Lund , V K , Erreger , K , Rickhag , M , Lycas , M D , Lonsdale , M N , Rahbek-Clemmensen , T , Sorensen , A T , Newman , A H , Lokkegaard , A , Kjaerulff , O , Werge , T , Moller , L B , Matthies , H J G , Galli , A , Hjermind , L E , Gether , U & IPSYCH Researchers 2021 , ' Identifying dominant-negative actions of a dopamine transporter variant in patients with parkinsonism and neuropsychiatric disease ' , JCI insight , vol. 6 , no. 18 , 151496 .
- Notes :
- application/pdf, English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1284965330
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource