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Publication : Vesicular transport regulates monoamine storage and release but is not essential for amphetamine action.

First Author  Fon EA Year  1997
Journal  Neuron Volume  19
Issue  6 Pages  1271-83
PubMed ID  9427250 Mgi Jnum  J:45183
Mgi Id  MGI:1194522 Doi  10.1016/s0896-6273(00)80418-3
Citation  Fon EA, et al. (1997) Vesicular transport regulates monoamine storage and release but is not essential for amphetamine action. Neuron 19(6):1271-83
abstractText  To assess the role of exocytotic release in signaling by monoamines, we have disrupted the neuronal vesicular monoamine transporter 2 (VMAT2) gene. VMAT2-/- mice move little, feed poorly, and die within a few days after birth. Monoamine cell groups and their projections are indistinguishable from those of wild-type littermates, but the brains of mutant mice show a drastic reduction in monoamines. Using midbrain cultures from the mutant animals, amphetamine but not depolarization induces dopamine release. In vivo, amphetamine increases movement, promotes feeding, and prolongs the survival of VMAT2-/- animals, indicating that precise, temporally regulated exocytotic release of monoamine is not required for certain complex behaviors. In addition, the brains of VMAT2 heterozygotes contain substantially lower monoamine levels than those of wild-type littermates, and depolarization induces less dopamine release from heterozygous than from wild-type cultures, suggesting that VMAT2 expression regulates monoamine storage and release.
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