Abstract

The human γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) transporter 1 (hGAT-1) is the first member of the solute carrier 6 (SLC6) protein superfamily. GAT-1 (SLC6A1) is one of the main GABA transporters in the central nervous system. Its principal physiological role is retrieving GABA from the synapse into neurons and astrocytes, thus swiftly terminating neurotransmission. GABA is a key inhibitory neurotransmitter and shifts in GABAergic signaling can lead to pathological conditions, from anxiety and epileptic seizures to schizophrenia. Point mutations in the SLC6A1 gene frequently give rise to epilepsy, intellectual disability or autism spectrum disorders in the afflicted individuals. The mechanistic routes underlying these are still fairly unclear. Some loss-of-function variants impair the folding and intracellular trafficking of the protein (thus retaining the transporter in the endoplasmic reticulum compartment), whereas others, despite managing to reach their bona fide site of action at the cell surface, nonetheless abolish GABA transport activity (plausibly owing to structural/conformational defects). Whatever the molecular culprit(s), the physiological aftermath transpires into the absence of functional transporters, which in turn perturbs GABAergic actions. Dozens of mutations in the kin SLC6 family members are known to exhort protein misfolding. Such events typically elicit severe ailments in people, e.g., infantile parkinsonism-dystonia or X-linked intellectual disability, in the case of dopamine and creatine transporters, respectively. Flaws in protein folding can be rectified by small molecules known as pharmacological and/or chemical chaperones. The search for such apt remedies calls for a systematic investigation and categorization of the numerous disease-linked variants, by biochemical and pharmacological means in vitro (in cell lines and primary neuronal cultures) and in vivo (in animal models). We here give special emphasis to the utilization of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster as a versatile model in GAT-1-related studies. Jointly, these approaches can portray indispensable insights into the molecular factors underlying epilepsy, and ultimately pave the way for contriving efficacious therapeutic options for patients harboring pathogenic mutations in hGAT-1.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Cellular Biochemistry, a section of the journal Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences

  • Diseases arising from foldingdeficient variants of other solute carrier (SLC) 6 transporters are not without precedent: e.g., misfolded variants of the dopamine transporter (DAT, SLC6A3) and the creatine transporter 1 (CRT-1, SLC6A8) cause infantile/juvenile parkinsonism-dystonia and the creatine transporter deficiency syndrome, respectively (Farr et al, 2020; Bhat et al, 2021)

  • Insights gained from studies of these closely related transporters may better our understanding of the molecular pathophysiology behind SLC6A1-related disorders, and considerably accelerate the development of novel precision medicine treatments

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Summary

ON THE RUDIMENTS OF GABA AND GATS

The γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is a non-proteinogenic amino acid, first detected in the brain tissue in the 1950s (Awapara et al, 1950; Roberts and Frankel, 1950). The GABA transporter 1 (GAT-1), encoded by the SLC6A1 gene, is one of the main GABA transporters in the brain. It is responsible for the reuptake of GABA from the synaptic cleft, constituting a core component of GABAergic signaling. Recent mutations discovered in the SLC6A1 gene have been linked to a range of neurodevelopmental disorders, including diverse epilepsy syndromes, intellectual disability (ID) and autism spectrum disorders (Goodspeed et al, 2020). The precise molecular culprits underlying the pathophysiological SLC6A1 mutations are as yet quite unknown. Recent experimental evidence suggests reduced or abolished GABA uptake function as a common feature underlying the disease mechanism (Mattison et al, 2018; Mermer et al, 2021). Insights gained from studies of these closely related transporters may better our understanding of the molecular pathophysiology behind SLC6A1-related disorders, and considerably accelerate the development of novel precision medicine treatments

THE SUBFAMILY OF GABA TRANSPORTER PROTEINS
Findings
CONCLUDING REMARKS
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