Functional identification of a vesicular acetylcholine transporter and its expression from a “cholinergic” gene locus (original) (raw)

A unique gene organization for two cholinergic markers, choline acetyltransferase and a putative vesicular transporter of acetylcholine

Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1994

Choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) is the biosynthetic enzyme of acetylcholine. In mammalian tissues, it is encoded by multiple mRNAs with different 5'-ends. This diversity results from the alternative usage of three promoters and from differential splicing events. Here, we show that the first intron of the rat ChAT gene contains an open reading frame that encodes a potential vesicular acetylcholine transporter based on the following criteria. (i) The encoded protein is structurally similar to transporter proteins, the highest identity being found with the vesicular acetylcholine transporters from Ibr-ped0 and Caenorhabditis elegans (77 and 56%, respectively, in 352 amino acids). (ii) The corresponding mRNAs exhibit a cholinergic expression profile. Amplification experiments with spinal cord cDNA revealed that at least three mRNAs encode this transporter. T w o contain the same 5' non-coding region as two ChAT mRNAs and, therefore, are derived from the ChAT transcription unit by alternative splicing. The third mRNA may be transcribed from an additional internal promoter. The neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh)' is synthesized in a one-step reaction by choline acetyltransferase (ChAT acetyl-CoAcholine O-acetyltransferase, EC 2.3.1.6). This enzyme is a specific marker for the functional states of cholinergic neurons. To study the regulatory mechanisms of ChAT expression, cDNA and genomic DNA for ChAT have been isolated from various species (for review see Ref. 1). Although a single-size murine ChAT mRNA was detected in adult nervous tissues by Northern blot experiments (2-41, the existence of multiple ChAT * This work was supported by grants from CNRS, INSERM, the Min

Identification of a region from the human cholinergic gene locus that targets expression of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter to a subset of neurons in the medial habenular nucleus in transgenic mice

Journal of Neurochemistry, 2003

We use a transgenic mouse model system to elucidate the regulatory regions within the human cholinergic gene locus responsible for vesicular acetylcholine transporter gene expression in vivo. In this report we characterized two transgenes for their ability to confer cholinergic-specific expression of the encoded vesicular acetylcholine transporter. An 11.2 kb transgene (named hV11.2) that spanned from about 5 kb upstream of the start of vesicular acetylcholine transporter translation down to the first choline acetyltransferase coding exon gave expression in the somatomotor neurons and a subpopulation of cholinergic neurons in the medial habenular nucleus. The second transgene (named hV6.7), a 5-prime truncated version of hV11.2 that was devoid of 4.5 kb of gene-regulatory sequences completely lacked vesicular acetylcholine transporter expression in vivo. Our data indicate that vesicular acetylcholine transporter expression in somatomotor neurons and in the medial habenular nucleus is uniquely specified within the cholinergic gene locus, and separable from cholinergic expression elsewhere. The identification of these two subdivisions of the cholinergic nervous system suggests that other cholinergic neurons in the CNS and PNS are similarly regulated by additional discrete domains within the cholinergic gene locus.

Expression of the putative vesicular acetylcholine transporter in rat brain and localization in cholinergic synaptic vesicles

The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience, 1996

A cholinergic locus has recently been identified consisting of a unique mammalian genomic arrangement containing the genes for choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) and a putative vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT). Although transcripts for ChAT and VAChT protein have been localized in cholinergic neurons, little is known about the encoded VAChT protein. Here we describe production of highly specific rabbit polyclonal antibodies, generated using a VAChT C-terminus/glutathione-S-transferase fusion protein, and immunological characterization of the native VAChT protein. These antibodies specifically recognized full-length recombinant VAChT expressed in transfected HeLa cells by Western blotting, with the prominent immunoreactive band at 55 kDa. In rat brain homogenates, a single VAChT-immunoreactive band of approximately 70 kDa was predominant in known areas of cholinergic innervation, including striatum, cortex, hippocampus,and amygdala. Light microscopic immunocytochemistry reve...

Regulation of cholinergic activity by the vesicular acetylcholine transporter

Biochemical Journal, 2013

Acetylcholine, the first chemical to be identified as a neurotransmitter, is packed in synaptic vesicles by the activity of VAChT (vesicular acetylcholine transporter). A decrease in VAChT expression has been reported in a number of diseases, and this has consequences for the amount of acetylcholine loaded in synaptic vesicles as well as for neurotransmitter release. Several genetically modified mice targeting the VAChT gene have been generated, providing novel models to understand how changes in VAChT affect transmitter release. A surprising finding is that most cholinergic neurons in the brain also can express a second type of vesicular neurotransmitter transporter that allows these neurons to secrete two distinct neurotransmitters. Thus a given neuron can use two neurotransmitters to regulate different physiological functions. In addition, recent data indicate that non-neuronal cells can also express the machinery used to synthesize and release acetylcholine. Some of these cells rely on VAChT to secrete acetylcholine with potential physiological consequences in the periphery. Hence novel functions for the oldest neurotransmitter known are emerging with the potential to provide new targets for the treatment of several pathological conditions.

Independent patterns of transcription for the products of the rat cholinergic gene locus

Neuroscience, 2001

öThe cholinergic phenotype requires the expression of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter and choline acetyltransferase proteins. Both genes are encoded at one chromosomal location called the cholinergic gene locus. We have identi¢ed by in situ hybridization histochemistry distinct patterns of transcription from the cholinergic gene locus in the subdivisions of the rat cholinergic nervous system. The vesicular acetylcholine transporter and choline acetyltransferase are co-expressed in cholinergic neurons at all developmental stages in all major types of cholinergic neurons. The relative levels of vesicular acetylcholine transporter and choline acetyltransferase transcripts, however, change substantially during development in the CNS. They also di¡er dramatically in distinct subdivisions of the mature cholinergic nervous system, with vesicular acetylcholine transporter mRNA expressed at high levels relative to choline acetyltransferase mRNA in the peripheral nervous system, but at equivalent levels in the CNS. Expression of the R-exon, the presumptive ¢rst non-coding exon common to both the vesicular acetylcholine transporter and choline acetyltransferase, was not detectable at any developmental stage in any of the cholinergic neuronal subtypes in the rat nervous system. Thus, in contrast to less complex metazoan organisms, production of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter and choline acetyltransferase via a common di¡erentially spliced transcript does not seem to occur to a signi¢cant extent in the rat. We suggest that separate transcriptional start sites within the cholinergic gene locus control vesicular acetylcholine transporter and choline acetyltransferase transcription, while additional elements are responsible for the speci¢c transcriptional control of the entire locus in cholinergic versus non-cholinergic neurons. Independent transcription of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter and choline acetyltransferase genes provides a mechanism for regulating the relative expression of these two proteins to ¢ne-tune acetylcholine quantal size in di¡erent types of cholinergic neurons, both centrally and peripherally.

Cholinergic neurons and terminal fields revealed by immunohistochemistry for the vesicular acetylcholine transporter. I. Central nervous system

Neuroscience, 1998

Antibodies directed against the C-terminus of the rat vesicular acetylcholine transporter mark expression of this specifically cholinergic protein in perinuclear regions of the soma and on secretory vesicles concentrated within cholinergic nerve terminals. In the central nervous system, the vesicular acetylcholine transporter terminal fields of the major putative cholinergic pathways in cortex, hippocampus, thalamus, amygdala, olfactory cortex and interpeduncular nucleus were examined and characterized. The existence of an intrinsic cholinergic innervation of cerebral cortex was confirmed by both in situ hybridization histochemistry and immunohistochemistry for the rat vesicular acetylcholine transporter and choline acetyltransferase. Cholinergic interneurons of the olfactory tubercle and Islands of Calleja, and the major intrinsic cholinergic innervation of striatum were fully characterized at the light microscopic level with vesicular acetylcholine transporter immunohistochemistry. Cholinergic staining was much more extensive for the vesicular acetylcholine transporter than for choline acetyltransferase in all these regions, due to visualization of cholinergic nerve terminals not easily seen with immunohistochemistry for choline acetyltransferase in paraffin-embedded sections. Cholinergic innervation of the median eminence of the hypothalamus, previously observed with vesicular acetylcholine transporter immunohistochemistry, was confirmed by the presence of vesicular acetylcholine transporter immunoreactivity in extracts of median eminence by western blotting. Cholinergic projections to cerebellum, pineal gland, and to the substantia nigra were documented by vesicular acetylcholine transporter-positive punctate staining in these structures. Additional novel localizations of putative cholinergic terminals to the subependymal zone surrounding the lateral ventricles, and putative cholinergic cell bodies in the sensory mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus, a primary sensory afferent ganglion located in the brainstem, are documented here. The cholinergic phenotype of neurons of the sensory mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus was confirmed by choline acetyltransferase immunohistochemistry. A feature of cholinergic neurons of the central nervous system revealed clearly with vesicular acetylcholine transporter immunohistochemistry in paraffin-embedded sections is the termination of cholinergic neurons on cholinergic cell bodies. These are most prominent on motor neurons of the spinal cord, less prominent but present in some brainstem motor nuclei, and apparently absent from projection neurons of the telencephalon and brainstem, as well as from the preganglionic vesicular acetylcholine transporter-positive sympathetic and parasympathetic neurons visualized in the intermediolateral and intermediomedial columns of the spinal cord. In addition to the large puncta decorating motor neuronal perikarya and dendrites in the ventral horn, vesicular acetylcholine transporter-positive terminal fields are distributed in lamina X surrounding the central canal, where additional small vesicular acetylcholine transporter-positive cell bodies are located, and in the superficial layers of the dorsal horn. Components of the central cholinergic nervous system whose existence has been controversial have been confirmed, and the existence of new components documented, with immunohistochemistry for the vesicular acetylcholine transporter. Quantitative visualization of terminal fields of known cholinergic systems by staining for vesicular acetylcholine transporter will expand the possibilities for documenting changes in synaptic patency accompanying physiological and pathophysiological changes in these systems. 1998 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.

Influence of retinoic acid and of cyclic AMP on the expression of choline acetyltransferase and of vesicular acetylcholine transporter in NG108-15 cells

Journal of Physiology-paris, 1998

Treatment of the cholinergic cell line NG108-1.5 with retinoic acid or CAMP results in an increase of choline acetyltransferase activity (ChAT) whereas none of these agents influences the amount of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) as judged from vesamicol binding and immunoblot studies. We suggest that immaturity of posttranslational events controlling the expression of VAChT protein is responsible for the apparent absence of coregulation of ChAT and VAChT protein expression. (OElsevier, Paris) R&urn6-Influence de l'acide rktindique et de I'AMP cyclique sur I'expression de la choline adtyltranfkrase et du transporteur vkiculaire d'ac&ylcboline dans les cellules NG108-15. Le traitement des cellules NGl08-15 par l'acide r&ino$ue ou I'AMP cyclique induit une augmentation de I'activitk choline acttyltranfkrase (ChAT). Toutefois, la quantitt de transporteur vksiculaire d'acCtylcholine (VAChT), estimke par des mesures de liaison du vksamicol et par ddtection de la protkine sur immunoblot, n'est pas modulCe par ces agents. Nous proposons I'hypothtise que I'absence apparente de corkgulation des deux prottines ChAT et VAChT est due g I'immaturitk de processus post translationnels rtgulant I'expression de VAChT.

Somatomotor neuron-specific expression of the human cholinergic gene locus in transgenic mice

Neuroscience, 2000

We examined the expression pattern of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter in the mouse nervous system, using rodent-specific riboprobes and antibodies, prior to comparing it with the distribution of vesicular acetylcholine transporter expressed from a human transgene in the mouse, using riboprobes and antibodies specific for human. Endogenous vesicular acetylcholine transporter expression was high in spinal and brainstem somatomotor neurons, vagal visceromotor neurons, and postganglionic parasympathetic neurons, moderate in basal forebrain and brainstem projection neurons and striatal interneurons, and low in intestinal intrinsic neurons. Vesicular acetylcholine transporter expression in intrinsic cortical neurons was restricted to the entorhinal cortex. The sequence of the mouse cholinergic gene locus to 5.1 kb upstream of the start of transcription of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter gene was determined and compared with the corresponding region of the human gene. Cisregulatory domains implicated previously in human or rat cholinergic gene regulation are highly conserved in mouse, indicating their probable relevance to the regulation of the mammalian cholinergic gene locus in vivo. Mouse lines were established containing a human transgene that included the vesicular acetylcholine transporter gene and sequences spanning 5 kb upstream and 1.8 kb downstream of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter open reading frame. In this transgene, the intact human vesicular acetylcholine transporter was able to act as its own reporter. This allowed elements within the vesicular acetylcholine transporter open reading frame itself, shown previously to affect transcription in vitro, to be assessed in vivo with antibodies and riboprobes that reliably distinguished between human and mouse vesicular acetylcholine transporters and their messenger RNAs. Expression of the human vesicular acetylcholine transporter was restricted to mouse cholinergic somatomotor neurons in the spinal cord and brainstem, but absent from other central and peripheral cholinergic neurons. The mouse appears to be an appropriate model for the study of the genetic regulation of the cholinergic gene locus, and the physiology and neurochemistry of the mammalian cholinergic nervous system, although differences exist in the distribution of cortical cholinergic neurons between the mouse and other mammals. The somatomotor neuron-specific expression pattern of the transgenic human vesicular acetylcholine transporter suggests a mosaic model for cholinergic gene locus regulation in separate subdivisions of the mammalian cholinergic nervous system.