Protein On 'Speed' Linked To ADHD
Medical Center
investigators report this week in The Journal of Neuroscience.
A genetic change in the dopamine transporter – one of the brain's
dopamine-handling proteins – makes it behave as if amphetamine is
present and "run backward," Vanderbilt University Medical Center
investigators report this week in The Journal of Neuroscience.
The altered function of the transporter gene variant, discovered in two
brothers with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), supports
a role for dopamine signaling in the disease. ADHD is one of the most
common mental health disorders in children and adolescents, affecting
up to 5 percent of school-age children in the United States.
"We believe that this is important evidence that ADHD can be caused
by a functional deficit in the brain's dopamine signaling pathway,"
said Randy Blakely, Ph.D., director of the Center for Molecular
Neuroscience.
The researchers propose that because the altered transporter runs
backward and pushes dopamine out into the space between neurons – like
normal transporters do when amphetamine, or 'speed,' is present – it
alters dopamine signaling and contributes to the symptoms of ADHD.
"It's like these kids are on amphetamine all the time," said
Aurelio Galli, Ph.D., an investigator in the center. Amphetamine causes
hyperactivity, paranoia and psychosis in normal subjects.
Variations in brain dopamine signaling have long been suspected to
participate in the development ADHD and other neuropsychiatric
disorders. Dopamine has roles in brain circuits linked to attention,
motor function, reward and cognition, and drugs that target dopamine
transporters and receptors are used to treat ADHD, bipolar disorder and
schizophrenia.
Because the dopamine transporter is a key member of the
dopamine-signaling network, Blakely and colleagues searched for changes
in this protein in patients with ADHD. They found a single "letter"
change in the transporter gene in two brothers. The particular mutation
had been reported once before in a patient with bipolar disorder, which
also has connections to dopamine signaling, but the functional impact
of the mutation had not been pursued, Blakely said.
In initial studies of the variant transporter in cultured cells,
the group found no differences in function compared to the normal
transporter – the mutant transporter moved dopamine into the cell and
was appropriately regulated by dopamine transporter blockers and
cellular signaling pathways.
Turning to a sensitive technology called amperometry that uses a
small carbon fiber to "listen in" on how single cells release or
transport dopamine, the Galli and Blakely laboratories discovered that
the altered transporters were running backward at an exaggerated rate,
literally pushing dopamine out of the cell.
"We think this activity would short circuit the normal synaptic
transmission process," Blakely said. "Instead of the precise
'pop-pop-pop' of dopamine being released from vesicles (tiny packets of
neurotransmitter), there's a cloud of dopamine bleeding out, and the
dopamine signaling system is not as sharp as it should be."
To their surprise, the investigators also found that amphetamine
blocks the leak of dopamine through variant transporter. Normally,
amphetamine does just what the mutation does – it causes the dopamine
transporter to run in the reverse direction.
The findings offer a new perspective on a conundrum in the ADHD
field – the fact that two of the medications that successfully treat
the disease have opposing effects on their molecular target, the
dopamine transporter. With the normal dopamine transporter,
methylphenidate (Ritalin) blocks the ability of amphetamine (Adderall)
to make the transporter run backward, yet both drugs are equally
beneficial to patients with ADHD.
But when the transporter runs backward of its own accord – as it
does with this rare mutant version – both agents act as blockers and
stop the leak of dopamine.
"This observation unifies the action of these drugs and strongly
suggests that backward-running transporters may be an important
mechanism in ADHD, even for those who do not have this particular
mutation," Blakely said.
Researchers studying the dopamine transporter have found that there
are multiple ways to cause the transporter to run backward, Galli
pointed out, and the team is now screening other genes in the "network
of signaling pathways that target the transporter and reverse dopamine
flow" as potential contributors to ADHD risk.
The investigators also speculate that backward-running transporters
may represent a more general phenomenon, giving rise to multiple types
of neuropsychiatric disorders.
"Millions of patients have taken drugs that block transporter
proteins, such as those that handle brain norepinephrine and serotonin,
to treat anxiety and depression," Blakely said. "We used to think that
the only thing these drugs could do is block uptake – now we wonder if
reducing the backward leak of neurotransmitter is a key component of
their utility."
Source: Vanderbilt University
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