Abstract

Although much is known about the effects of Na+, K+, and Cl- on the functional activity of the neuronal dopamine transporter, little information is available on their role in the initial event in dopamine uptake, i.e., the recognition step. This was addressed here by studying the inhibition by dopamine of the binding of [3H]WIN 35,428 [2beta-carbomethoxy-3beta-(4-fluorophenyl)[3H]tropane], a phenyltropane analogue of cocaine, to the cloned human dopamine transporter expressed in HEK-293 cells. The decrease in the affinity of dopamine (or WIN 35,428) binding affinity with increasing [K+] could be fitted to a competitive model involving an inhibitory cation site (1) overlapping with the dopamine (or WIN 35,428) domain. The K+ IC50 for inhibiting dopamine or WIN 35,428 binding increased linearly with [Na+], indicating a K(D,Na+) of 30-44 mM and a K(D,K+) of 13-16 mM for this cation site. A second Na+ site (2), distal from the WIN 35,428 domain but linked by positive allosterism, was indicated by model fitting of the WIN 35,428 binding affinities as a function of [Na+]. No strong evidence for this second site was obtained for dopamine binding in the absence or presence of low (20 mM) Cl- and could not be acquired for high [Cl-] because of the lack of a suitable substitute ion for Na+. The K(D) but not Bmax of [3H]WIN 35,428 binding increased as a function of the [K+]/[Na+] ratio regardless of total [Cl-] or ion tonicity. A similar plot was obtained for the Ki of dopamine binding, with Cl- at > or = 140 mM decreasing the Ki. At 290 mM Cl- and 300 mM Na+ the potency of K+ in inhibiting dopamine binding was enhanced as compared with the absence of Cl- in contrast to the lack of effect of Cl- up to 140 mM (Na up to 150 mM). The results indicate that Cl- at its extracellular level enhances dopamine binding through a mechanism not involving site 1. The observed correspondence between the WIN 35,428 and dopamine domains in their inclusion of the inhibitory cation site explains why many of the previously reported interrelated effects of Na+ and K+ on the binding site of radiolabeled blockers to the dopamine transporter are applicable to dopamine uptake in which dopamine recognition is the first step.

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