Dynamic changes in vesicular glutamate transporter 1 function and expression related to methamphetamine-induced glutamate release

KA Mark, MS Quinton, SJ Russek… - Journal of …, 2007 - Soc Neuroscience
KA Mark, MS Quinton, SJ Russek, BK Yamamoto
Journal of Neuroscience, 2007Soc Neuroscience
The vesicular glutamate (GLU) transporter (VGLUT1) is a critical component of glutamatergic
neurons that regulates GLU release. Despite the likely role of GLU release in drug abuse
pathology, there is no information that links VGLUT1 with drugs of abuse. This study
provides the first evidence that methamphetamine (METH) alters the dynamic regulation of
striatal VGLUT1 function and expression through a polysynaptic pathway. METH increases
cortical VGLUT1 mRNA, striatal VGLUT1 protein in subcellular fractions, and the V max of …
The vesicular glutamate (GLU) transporter (VGLUT1) is a critical component of glutamatergic neurons that regulates GLU release. Despite the likely role of GLU release in drug abuse pathology, there is no information that links VGLUT1 with drugs of abuse. This study provides the first evidence that methamphetamine (METH) alters the dynamic regulation of striatal VGLUT1 function and expression through a polysynaptic pathway. METH increases cortical VGLUT1 mRNA, striatal VGLUT1 protein in subcellular fractions, and the Vmax of striatal vesicular GLU uptake. METH also increases glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) protein in the crude vesicle fraction. METH-induced increases in cortical VGLUT1 mRNA, as well as striatal VGLUT1 and GAPDH, are GABAA receptor-dependent because they are blocked by GABAA receptor antagonism in the substantia nigra. These results show that VGLUT1 can be dynamically regulated via a polysynaptic pathway to facilitate vesicular accumulation of GLU for subsequent release after METH.
Soc Neuroscience