Abstract

The serotonin transporter (SERT) belongs to the SLC6 family of sodium- and chloride-dependent neurotransmitter transporters responsible for uptake of amino acids and biogenic amines from extracellular spaces. Their activities and subcellular distributions are regulated by various cellular mechanisms, including interactions with other proteins. Using the yeast two-hybrid approach we screened a human brain cDNA library and identified secretory carrier membrane protein 2 (SCAMP2) as a novel SERT-interacting protein. GST-pulldown assays confirmed the physical interaction between SCAMP2 and the N-terminal domain of SERT. In addition, SERT was found to form a complex with SCAMP2 as demonstrated by co-immunoprecipitation from a heterologous expression system and from rat brain homogenate. Co-expression of SERT and SCAMP2 in mammalian cells results in the subcellular redistribution of SERT with a decrease in cell surface SERT and a concomitant reduction in 5-HT uptake activity. Using confocal microscopy we show that in neuronal cells endogenous SERT co-localizes with SCAMP2 in discrete structures also containing the lipid raft marker flotillin-1 and the SNARE protein syntaxin 1A. In contrast, SERT immunoreactivity is clearly segregated from transferrin receptor-containing endosomes. A single amino acid mutation, cysteine-201 to alanine, within the conserved cytoplasmic E peptide of SCAMP2, abolished SCAMP2-mediated down-regulation of SERT, although this mutation had no effect on the physical interaction between SERT and SCAMP2. Taken together, our results suggest that SCAMP2 plays an important role in the regulation of the subcellular distribution of SERT.

Highlights

  • Transmission through the reuptake of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, serotonin) from the synapse

  • The physical interaction between secretory carrier membrane protein 2 (SCAMP2) and the N-terminal domain of serotonin transporter (SERT) was confirmed by GST pulldown assay in which a fusion protein of GST and the N-terminal domain of SERT (N-SERT), but neither GST alone nor a C-terminal construct of SERT (C-SERT), were able to bind SCAMP2 from transfected HEK293 cells (Fig. 1A)

  • We report the identification of SCAMP2 as a novel SERT-interacting protein that influences the subcellular localization of the transporter

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Summary

Introduction

Transmission through the reuptake of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT, serotonin) from the synapse. Regulation of the Subcellular Distribution of SERT by SCAMP2 monoamine transporters and seems to enhance their cell surface expression [17]. For co-immunoprecipitation assays on transfected HEK-293 cells, 500 ␮g of total protein (prepared in 5 mM CHAPS lysis buffer) was incubated with 1 ␮g of control goat IgG or 1 ␮g of anti-SERT (C-20).

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