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Chemical neuroanatomy of the vesicular amine transporters

ABSTRACT Acetylcholine, catecholamines, serotonin, and histamine are classical neurotransmitters. These small molecules also play important roles in the endocrine and immune/inflammatory systems. Serotonin secreted from enterochromaffin cells of the gut epithelium regulates gut motility; histamine s...

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Published in:The FASEB journal 2000-12, Vol.14 (15), p.2435-2449
Main Authors: Weihe, Eberhard, Eiden, Lee E.
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Language:English
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description ABSTRACT Acetylcholine, catecholamines, serotonin, and histamine are classical neurotransmitters. These small molecules also play important roles in the endocrine and immune/inflammatory systems. Serotonin secreted from enterochromaffin cells of the gut epithelium regulates gut motility; histamine secreted from basophils and mast cells is a major regulator of vascular permeability and skin inflammatory responses; epinephrine is a classical hormone released from the adrenal medulla. Each of these molecules is released from neural, endocrine, or immune/inflammatory cells only in response to specific physiological stimuli. Regulated secretion is possible because amines are stored in secretory vesicles and released via a stimulus‐dependent exocytotic event. Amine storage—at concentrations orders of magnitude higher than in the cytoplasm—is accomplished in turn by specific secretory vesicle transporters that recognize the amines and move them from the cytosol into the vesicle. Immunohistochemical visualization of specific vesicular amine transporters (VATs) in neuronal, endocrine, and inflammatory cells provides important new information about how amine‐handling cell phenotypes arise during development and how vesicular transport is regulated during homeostatic response events. Comparison of the chemical neuroanatomy of VATs and amine biosynthetic enzymes has also revealed cell groups that express vesicular transporters but not enzymes for monoamine synthesis, and vice versa:their function and regulation is a new topic of investigation in mammalian neurobiology. The chemical neuroanatomy of the vesicular amine transporters is reviewed here. These and similar data emerging from the study of the localization of the recently characterized vesicular inhibitory and excitatory amino acid transporters will contribute to understanding chemically coded synaptic circuitry in the brain, and amine‐handling neuroendocrine and immune/inflammatory cell regulation.—Weihe, E., Eiden, L. E. Chemical neuroanatomy of the vesicular amine transporters. The FASEB J. 14, 2435–2449 (2000)
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subjects Acetylcholine
aminehandling cell
aminergic neuron
autonomic
Biogenic Monoamines
Carrier Proteins - isolation & purification
CNS
endocrine cell
immune
inflammatory
Membrane Glycoproteins - isolation & purification
Membrane Transport Proteins
Nervous System - anatomy & histology
Nervous System - chemistry
Neuropeptides
Synaptic Vesicles - chemistry
Vesicular Biogenic Amine Transport Proteins
title Chemical neuroanatomy of the vesicular amine transporters
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