Title: Nature of methamphetamine-induced rapid and reversible changes in dopamine transporters
Abstract: The nature of methamphetamine-induced rapid and transient decreases in dopamine transporter activity was investigated. Regional specificity was demonstrated, since [3H]dopamine uptake was decreased in synaptosomes prepared from the striatum, but not nucleus accumbens, of methamphetamine-treated rats. Differences among effects on dopamine transporter activity and ligand binding were also observed, since a single methamphetamine administration decreased [3H]dopamine uptake without altering [3H]WIN35428 ([3H](−)-2-β-carbomethoxy-3-β-(4-fluorophenyl)tropane 1,5-naphthalenedisulfonate) binding in synaptosomes prepared 1 h after injection. Moreover, multiple methamphetamine injections caused a greater decrease in [3H]dopamine uptake than [3H]WIN35428 binding in synaptosomes prepared 1 h after dosing. Finally, decreases in [3H]dopamine uptake, but not [3H]WIN35428 binding, were partially reversed 24 h after multiple methamphetamine injections. Western blotting indicated that saline- and methamphetamine-affected dopamine transporters co-migrated on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gels at approximately 80 kDa, and that acute, methamphetamine-induced decreases in [3H]dopamine uptake were not due to loss of dopamine transporter protein. These findings demonstrate heretofore-uncharacterized features of the acute effect of methamphetamine on dopamine transporters.
Publication Year: 1998
Publication Date: 1998-11-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 101
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