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Published July 2002 | public
Journal Article

Early Fluorescence Signals Detect Transitions at Mammalian Serotonin Transporters

Abstract

The mammalian serotonin transporters rSERT or hSERT were expressed in oocytes and labeled with sulforhodamine-MTS. The endogenous Cys-109 residue contributes most of the signal, and the labeled transporter shows normal function. The SERT fluorescence decreases in the presence of 5-HT and also depends on the inorganic substrates of SERT. The fluorescence also increases with membrane depolarization. During voltage-jump experiments, fluorescence relaxations show little inactivation or history dependence. The fluorescence signal has a voltage dependence similar to that of the prepriming step of the previously described voltage-dependent transient current. However, the fluorescence relaxations are the fastest voltage-dependent events yet studied at SERT; their time constants of ∼8–30 ms are severalfold faster than the prepriming or inactivation phases of the transient currents. These fluorescence signals are interpreted within the framework of the gate-lumen-gate model. The signals may monitor initial events at the outer gate.

Additional Information

© 2002 The Biophysical Society. Submitted September 24, 2001, and accepted for publication February 13, 2002. We thank Yanhe Tong for making the C109A mutant of hSERT. This research was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant DA-019121 and by a National Research Service Award to Ming Li.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023