Abstract

Here, we validate the use of a novel fluorescent norepinephrine transporter (NET) substrate for dynamic measurements of transporter function in rodent cardiovascular tissue; this technique avoids the use of radiotracers and provides single-terminal resolution.Rodent (Wistar rats and C57BL/6 mice) hearts and mesenteric arteries (MA) were isolated, loaded with NET substrate Neurotransmitter Transporter Uptake Assay (NTUA) ex vivo and imaged with confocal microscopy.NTUA labelled noradrenergic nerve terminals in all four chambers of the heart and on the surface of MA. In all tissues, a temperature-dependent, stable linear increase in intra-terminal fluorescence upon NTUA exposure was observed; this was abolished by NET inhibitor desipramine (1 μM) and reversed by indirectly-acting sympathomimetic amine tyramine (10 μM). NET reuptake rates were similar across the mouse cardiac chambers. In both species, cardiac NET activity was significantly greater than in MA (by 62 ± 29% (mouse) and 21 ± 16% (rat)). We also show that mouse NET reuptake rate was twice as fast as that in the rat (for example, in the heart, by 94 ± 30%). Finally, NET reuptake rate in the mouse heart was attenuated with muscarinic agonist carbachol (10 μM) thus demonstrating the potential for parasympathetic regulation of norepinephrine clearance.Our data provide the first demonstration of monitoring intra-terminal NET function in rodent cardiovascular tissue. This straightforward method allows dynamic measurements of transporter rate in response to varying physiological conditions and drug treatments; this offers the potential to study new mechanisms of sympathetic dysfunction associated with cardiovascular disease.

Highlights

  • Noradrenergic volume transmission depends on the interplay between norepinephrine (NE) release and its subsequent reuptake by the norepinephrine transporter (NET)

  • Tools to directly study NET kinetics in mature sympathetic nerve terminals are needed in order to better understand transporter regulation, which has been shown to be impaired in several cardiovascular diseases (Schroeder and Jordan, 2011, 2012), and is frequently used as a target for pharmacotherapeutics (Zhou, 2004)

  • Fluorescence imaging has proved useful in discerning individual synapses microscopically at high temporal resolutions and, our group demonstrated the use of a fluorescent NET substrate to measure NET function in sympathetic terminals of the mouse vas deferens (Parker et al, 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

Noradrenergic volume transmission depends on the interplay between norepinephrine (NE) release and its subsequent reuptake by the norepinephrine transporter (NET). Tools to directly study NET kinetics in mature sympathetic nerve terminals are needed in order to better understand transporter regulation, which has been shown to be impaired in several cardiovascular diseases (Schroeder and Jordan, 2011, 2012), and is frequently used as a target for pharmacotherapeutics (Zhou, 2004). An additional benefit of this technique is the ability to identify such terminals amongst a mix of peripheral neuronal types; for example, in addition to Abbreviations: NET, norepinephrine transporter; NE, norepinephrine; NTUA, neurotransmitter transporter uptake assay; LAA, left atrial appendage; MA, mesenteric artery

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