Abstract

Genetic factors are known to significantly contribute to the etiology of psychiatric diseases such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum and bipolar disorders, but the underlying molecular processes remain largely elusive. The dopamine transporter (DAT) has received continuous attention as a potential risk factor for psychiatric disease, as it is critical for dopamine homeostasis and serves as principal target for ADHD medications. Constrain metrics for the DAT-encoding gene, solute carrier family 6 member 3 (SLC6A3), indicate that missense mutations are under strong negative selection, pointing to pathophysiological outcomes when DAT function is compromised. Here, we systematically characterized six rare genetic variants of DAT (I312F, T356M, D421N, A559V, E602G, and R615C) identified in patients with neuropsychiatric disorders. We evaluated dopamine uptake and ligand interactions, along with ion coordination and electrophysiological properties, to elucidate functional phenotypes, and applied Zn2+ exposure and a substituted cysteine-accessibility approach to identify shared structural changes. Three variants (I312F, T356M, and D421N) exhibited impaired dopamine uptake associated with changes in ligand binding, ion coordination, and distinct conformational disturbances. Remarkably, we found that all three variants displayed gain-of-function electrophysiological phenotypes. I312F mediated an increased uncoupled anion conductance previously suggested to modulate neuronal excitability. T356M and D421N both mediated a cocaine-sensitive leakage of cations, which for T356M was potentiated by Zn2+, concurrent with partial functional rescue. Collectively, our findings support that gain of disruptive functions due to missense mutations in SLC6A3 may be key to understanding how dopaminergic dyshomeostasis arises in heterozygous carriers.

Highlights

  • Genetic factors are known to significantly contribute to the etiology of psychiatric diseases such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum and bipolar disorders, but the underlying molecular processes remain largely elusive

  • D421N is positioned in TM8 directly within the second sodium-binding site, whereas A559V is found near the beginning of TM12

  • Rare variants have been found to account for a significant component of the genetic architecture of several psychiatric disorders, and the association signal for both common and rare variants appears to be enriched in mutation-intolerant genes [1, 61,62,63,64]

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Summary

Results

Functional impact of rare coding DAT variants correlates with allele frequency and conservation. To compare the variants’ PolyPhen-2 scores with direct functional measures, we performed [3H]dopamine uptake and [3H]CFT-binding experiments on transiently transfected COS-7 cells. Three of the six variants (I312F, T356M, and D421N) displayed functional impairments (Fig. 1C and Table 1) Both I312F and T356M showed reduced uptake capacity (ϳ50 and ϳ40% of DAT WT, respectively), consistent with previous findings [25, 29]. The uptake impairments of T356M and D421N were associated with pronounced (ϳ50-fold) affinity losses for the high-affinity cocaine analogue, CFT, whereas the variants’ maximal binding capacities were significantly higher than for DAT WT. For T356M, all three ligands showed significantly lower inhibitory potency than for DAT WT, but the apparent affinity loss was pronounced for blockers (IC50 values for T356M were ϳ7-, ϳ40-, and ϳ150-fold higher than for DAT WT for amphetamine, cocaine, and methylphenidate, respectively, Fig. 2 and Table 2). We did not observe any differences in ligand IC50 values for A559V, E602G, and R615C, and we could not obtain reliable IC50 values for D421N, because of a very low uptake signal

Ion binding is perturbed in functionally impaired DAT variants
Discussion
Molecular biology and cell culturing
MTSET accessibility
Electrophysiology on oocytes
Quantification and statistics
Full Text
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