AI Article Synopsis

  • The NET (noradrenaline transporter) has different isoforms due to alternative splicing, affecting how they express and function.
  • Researchers studied two main isoforms, hNET1 and hNET2, using mutations and assays to assess their activity and surface expression.
  • Findings revealed that specific regions in the C-terminus are crucial for cell surface expression and norepinephrine uptake, indicating a complex regulatory relationship for these splice variants.

Article Abstract

The NET [noradrenaline (norepinephrine) transporter], an Na+/Cl--dependent neurotransmitter transporter, has several isoforms produced by alternative splicing in the C-terminal region, each differing in expression and function. We characterized the two major isoforms of human NET, hNET1, which has seven C-terminal amino acids encoded by exon 15, and hNET2, which has 18 amino acids encoded by exon 16, by site-directed mutagenesis in combination with NE (noradrenaline) uptake assays and cell surface biotinylation. Mutants lacking one third or more of the 24 amino acids encoded by exon 14 exhibited neither cell surface expression nor NE uptake activity, with the exception of the mutant lacking the last eight amino acids of hNET2, whose expression and uptake resembled that of the WT (wild-type). A triple alanine replacement of a candidate motif (ENE) in this region mimicked the influences of the truncation. Deletion of either the last three or another four amino acids of the C-terminus encoded by exon 15 in hNET1 reduced the cell surface expression and NE uptake, whereas deletion of all seven residues reduced the transport activity but did not affect the cell surface expression. Replacement of RRR, an endoplasmic reticulum retention motif, by alanine residues in the C-terminus of hNET2 resulted in a similar expression and function compared with the WT, while partly recovering the effects of the mutation of ENE. These findings suggest that in addition to the function of the C-terminus, the common proximal region encoded by exon 14 regulates the functional expression of splice variants, such as hNET1 and hNET2.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1698689PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1042/BJ20060495DOI Listing

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