Open Access
Functionally distinct dopamine and octopamine transporters in the CNS of the cabbage looper moth *
Author(s) -
Gallant Pamela,
Malutan Tabita,
McLean Heather,
Verellen LouAnn,
Caveney Stanley,
Donly Cam
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1046/j.1432-1033.2003.03417.x
Subject(s) - dopamine , cabbage looper , dopamine transporter , biology , octopamine (neurotransmitter) , monoamine neurotransmitter , transporter , vesicular monoamine transporter , biochemistry , dopamine plasma membrane transport proteins , trichoplusia , endocrinology , receptor , serotonin , gene , botany , larva , noctuidae
A cDNA was cloned from the cabbage looper Trichoplusia ni based on similarity to other cloned dopamine transporters (DATs). The total nucleotide sequence is 3.8 kb in length and contains an open reading frame for a protein of 612 amino acids. The predicted moth DAT protein (TrnDAT) has greatest amino acid sequence identity with Drosophila melanogaster DAT (73%) and Caenorhabditis elegans DAT (51%). TrnDAT shares only 45% amino acid sequence identity with an octopamine transporter (TrnOAT) cloned recently from this moth. The functional properties of TrnDAT and TrnOAT were compared through transient heterologous expression in Sf9 cells. Both transporters have similar transport affinities for DA ( K m 2.43 and 2.16 µ m , respectively). However, the competitive substrates octopamine and tyramine are more potent blockers of [ 3 H]dopamine (DA) uptake by TrnOAT than by TrnDAT. D ‐Amphetamine is a strong inhibitor and l ‐norepinephrine a weak inhibitor of both transporters. TrnDAT‐mediated DA uptake is approximately 100‐fold more sensitive to selective blockers of vertebrate transporters of dopamine and norepinephrine, such as nisoxetine, nomifensine and dibenzazepine antidepressants, than TrnOAT‐mediated DA uptake. TrnOAT is 10‐fold less sensitive to cocaine than TrnDAT. None of the 15 monoamine uptake blockers tested was TrnOAT‐selective. In situ hybridization shows that TrnDAT and TrnOAT transcripts are expressed by different sets of neurons in caterpillar brain and ventral nerve cord. These results show that the caterpillar CNS contains both a phenolamine transporter and a catecholamine transporter whereas in the three invertebrates whose genomes have been completely sequenced only a dopamine‐selective transporter is found.