Abstract

BackgroundThe effects of estrogens on dopamine (DA) transport may have important implications for the increased incidence of neurological disorders in women during life stages when hormonal fluctuations are prevalent, e.g. during menarche, reproductive cycling, pregnancy, and peri-menopause.ResultsThe activity of the DA transporter (DAT) was measured by the specific uptake of 3H-DA. We found that low concentrations (10-14 to 10-8 M) of 17β-estradiol (E2) inhibit uptake via the DAT in PC12 cells over 30 minutes, with significant inhibition taking place due to E2 exposure during only the last five minutes of the uptake period. Such rapid action suggests a non-genomic, membrane-initiated estrogenic response mechanism. DAT and estrogen receptor-α (ERα) were elevated in cell extracts by a 20 ng/ml 2 day NGFβ treatment, while ERβ was not. DAT, ERα and ERβ were also detectable on the plasma membrane of unpermeabilized cells by immunocytochemical staining and by a fixed cell, quantitative antibody (Ab)-based plate assay. In addition, PC12 cells contained RNA coding for the alternative membrane ER GPR30; therefore, all 3 ER subtypes are candidates for mediating the rapid nongenomic actions of E2. At cell densities above 15,000 cells per well, the E2-induced inhibition of transport was reversed. Uptake activity oscillated with time after a 10 nM E2 treatment; in a slower room temperature assay, inhibition peaked at 9 min, while uptake activity increased at 3 and 20–30 min. Using an Ab recognizing the second extracellular loop of DAT (accessible only on the outside of unpermeabilized cells), our immunoassay measured membrane vs. intracellular/nonvesicular DAT; both were found to decline over a 5–60 min E2 treatment, though immunoblot analyses demonstrated no total cellular loss of protein.ConclusionOur results suggest that physiological levels of E2 may act to sequester DAT in intracellular compartments where the transporter's second extramembrane loop is inaccessible (inside vesicles) and that rapid estrogenic actions on this differentiated neuronal cell type may be regulated via membrane ERs of several types.

Highlights

  • The effects of estrogens on dopamine (DA) transport may have important implications for the increased incidence of neurological disorders in women during life stages when hormonal fluctuations are prevalent, e.g. during menarche, reproductive cycling, pregnancy, and peri-menopause

  • To develop a cell model in which robust DA transporter (DAT) responses could be monitored for estrogen regulation after shorter differentiation times, we chose to assay DAT levels directly via an immunofluorescence assay

  • Our studies demonstrated the expression of DAT and several types of membrane estrogen receptors (ERs) (ERα, ERβ and GPR30) in PC12 cells

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Summary

Introduction

The effects of estrogens on dopamine (DA) transport may have important implications for the increased incidence of neurological disorders in women during life stages when hormonal fluctuations are prevalent, e.g. during menarche, reproductive cycling, pregnancy, and peri-menopause. Some women experience mood disturbances as a function of monthly cyclic hormonal fluctuations (premenstrual syndrome or premenstrual disphoric disorder, or in extreme cases, premenstrual dementia [8,9,10]). Increased body fat protects against cycle-based mood swings [11] and surgical menopause-based depression, probably by serving as a depot for lipophillic hormones (including estrogens) that buffer large changes [12]. In patients where these changes are excessive, disturbances of behavior may result; it is important to understand the cellular mechanisms through which estrogens operate across this wide range of physiological levels [13]

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