Abstract

Valproate is an important anticonvulsant currently in clinical use for the treatment of seizures. We used electrophysiological and tracer uptake methods to examine the effect of valproate on a gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) transporter (mouse GAT3) expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. In the absence of GABA, valproate (up to 50 mm) had no noticeable effect on the steady-state electrogenic properties of mGAT3. In the presence of GABA, however, valproate enhanced the GABA-evoked steady-state inward current in a dose-dependent manner with a half-maximal concentration of 4.6 +/- 0.5 mm. Maximal enhancement of the GABA-evoked current was 275 +/- 10%. Qualitatively similar observations were obtained for human GAT1 and mouse GAT4. The valproate enhancement did not alter the Na(+) or Cl(-) dependence of the steady-state GABA-evoked currents. Uptake experiments under voltage clamp suggested that the valproate enhancement of the GABA-evoked current was matched by an enhancement in GABA uptake. Thus, despite the increase in GABA-evoked current, ion/GABA co-transport remained tightly coupled. Uptake experiments indicated that valproate is not transported by mouse GAT3 in the absence or presence of GABA. Valproate also enhanced the rate of the partial steps involved in transporter presteady-state charge movements. We propose that valproate increases the turnover rate of GABA transporters by an allosteric mechanism. The data suggest that at its therapeutic concentration, valproate may enhance the activity of neuronal and glial GABA transporters by up to 10%.

Highlights

  • Valproate is an important anticonvulsant currently in clinical use for the treatment of seizures

  • Valproate Enhances mGAT3 Turnover Rate without Altering Ion/GABA Coupling—In voltage-clamped (Ϫ60 mV) oocytes expressing mGAT3, application of valproate (5 mM) to the bathing medium had no effect on the holding current (Fig. 1A, left panel)

  • Valproate Decreases the Apparent Affinity for GABA—We examined the effect of valproate on the steady-state apparent affinity of mGAT3 for Naϩ, ClϪ, and GABA (Fig. 5)

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Summary

Introduction

Valproate is an important anticonvulsant currently in clinical use for the treatment of seizures. We used electrophysiological and tracer uptake methods to examine the effect of valproate on a ␥-aminobutyric acid (GABA) transporter (mouse GAT3) expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. Many studies have examined valproate-induced GABA release from neurons and glia, vesicular versus non-vesicular (i.e. transporter-mediated) release mechanisms have not been definitively addressed. These studies as well as those examining the effect of valproate on GABA uptake by neurons and/or glial cells have not provided entirely consistent results; the available evidence favors valproate-induced GABA release from nerve terminals in selected brain regions The interaction of valproate with GATs opens new experimental avenues for probing the mechanism of Naϩ/ClϪ/GABA co-transport

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