4.6 Article

Vesicular glutamate transporter contains two independent transport machineries

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 281, Issue 51, Pages 39499-39506

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M607670200

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Vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUTs) are responsible for the vesicular storage of L-glutamate and play an essential role in glutamatergic signal transmission in the central nervous system. The molecular mechanism of the transport remains unknown. Here, we established a novel in vitro assay procedure, which includes purification of wild and mutant VGLUT2 and their reconstitution with purified bacterial F0F1-ATPase (F-ATPase) into liposomes. Upon the addition of ATP, the proteoliposomes facilitated L-glutamate uptake in a membrane potential (Delta psi)-dependent fashion. The ATP-dependent L-glutamate uptake exhibited an absolute requirement for similar to 4 mM Cl-, was sensitive to Evans blue, but was insensitive to D, L-aspartate. VGLUT2s with mutations in the transmembrane-located residues Arg(184), His(128), and Glu(191) showed a dramatic loss in L-glutamate transport activity, whereas Na+-dependent inorganic phosphate (Pi) uptake remained comparable to that of the wild type. Furthermore, Pi transport did not require Cl- and was not inhibited by Evans blue. Thus, VGLUT2 appears to possess two intrinsic transport machineries that are independent of each other: a Delta psi-dependent L-glutamate uptake and a Na+-dependent Pi uptake.

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