Neurotoxic Methamphetamine Doses Alter CDCel-1 Levels and Its Interaction with Vesicular Monoamine Transporter-2 in Rat Striatum

Author:

Chauhan Heli,Carruthers Nick,Stemmer Paul,Schneider Bernard P.,Moszczynska AnnaORCID

Abstract

AbstractIn recent years, methamphetamine METH misuse in the US has been rapidly increasing and there is no FDA-approved pharmacotherapy for METH use disorder (MUD). In addition to being dependent on the drug, people with MUD develop a variety of neurological problems related to the toxicity of this drug. A variety of molecular mechanisms underlying METH neurotoxicity has been identified, including dysfunction of the neuroprotective protein parkin. However, it is not known whether parkin loss of function within striatal dopaminergic (DAergic) terminals translates into a decrease in DA storage capacity. This study examined the relationship between parkin, its substrate cell division cycle related-1 (CDCrel-1), and vesicular monoamine transporter-2 (VMAT2) in METH neurotoxicity in male Sprague Dawley rats. To also assess individual differences in response to METH’s neurotoxic effects, a large group of rats was treated with binge METH or saline and sacrificed 1h or 24h later. This study is the first to show that binge METH alters the levels and subcellular localization of CDCrel-1 and that CDCrel-1 interacts with VMAT2 and increases its levels at the plasma membrane. Furthermore, we found wide individual differences in the responses of measured indices to METH. Proteomic analysis of VMAT-2-associated proteins revealed upregulation of several proteins involved in the exocytosis/endocytosis cycle. The results suggest that at 1h after METH binge, DAergic neurons are engaged in counteracting METH-induced toxic effects, including oxidative stress- and hyperthermia-induced inhibition of synaptic vesicle cycling, with the responses varying between individual rats. Studying CDCrel-1, VMAT2, and other proteins in large groups of outbred rats can help define individual genetic and molecular differences in responses to METH neurotoxicity which, in turn, will aid treating humans suffering from METH use disorder and its neurological consequences.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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