Abstract

gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) transporters on neurons and glia at or near the synapse function to remove GABA from the synaptic cleft. Recent evidence suggests that GABA transporter function can be regulated, although the initial triggers for such regulation are not known. One hypothesis is that transporter function is modulated by extracellular GABA concentration, thus providing a feedback mechanism for the control of neurotransmitter levels at the synapse. To test this hypothesis, GABA uptake assays were performed on primary dissociated rat hippocampal cultures that endogenously express GABA transporters and on mammalian cells stably expressing the cloned rat brain GABA transporter GAT1. In both experimental systems, extracellular GABA induces chronic changes in GABA transport that occur in a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner. In addition to GABA, ACHC and nipecotic acid, both substrates of GAT1, up-regulate transport; GAT1 transport inhibitors that are not transporter substrates down-regulate transport. These changes occur in the presence of blockers of both GABAA and GABAB receptors, occur in the presence of protein synthesis inhibitors, and are not influenced by intracellular GABA. Surface biotinylation experiments reveal that the increase in transport is correlated with an increase in surface transporter expression. This increase in surface expression is due, at least in part, to a slowing of GAT1 internalization in the presence of extracellular GABA. These data suggest that the GABA transporter fine-tunes its function in response to extracellular GABA and would act to maintain a constant level of neurotransmitter at the synaptic cleft.

Highlights

  • GABA1 transporters are members of a large family of Naϩdependent neurotransmitter reuptake proteins, located on the plasma membrane of neurons and glia, that function in part to determine neurotransmitter levels in the synaptic cleft [1]

  • We show that both agonists and antagonists of the GABA transporter can trigger long term changes in GABA transporter function, and we identify the mechanism underlying these changes

  • The inclusion of SKF89976A, a high affinity inhibitor [25] of the rat brain GABA transporter GAT1 [26], during the assay reduced GABA uptake by greater than 90% both in control cultures and cultures pretreated with GABA

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Summary

Introduction

GABA1 transporters are members of a large family of Naϩdependent neurotransmitter reuptake proteins, located on the plasma membrane of neurons and glia, that function in part to determine neurotransmitter levels in the synaptic cleft [1]. These data suggest that the majority of GABA transport mediated in these neuronal cultures, and the subsequent modulation by GABA, occurs via GAT1.

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