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Transport and inhibition mechanisms of the human noradrenaline transporter.

Tuo HuZhuoya YuJun ZhaoYufei MengKristine Walloe SalomonQinru BaiYiqing WeiJinghui ZhangShujing XuQiuyun DaiRilei YuBei YangClaus J LølandYan Zhao
Published in: Nature (2024)
The noradrenaline transporter (also known as norepinephrine transporter) (NET) has a critical role in terminating noradrenergic transmission by utilizing sodium and chloride gradients to drive the reuptake of noradrenaline (also known as norepinephrine) into presynaptic neurons 1-3 . It is a pharmacological target for various antidepressants and analgesic drugs 4,5 . Despite decades of research, its structure and the molecular mechanisms underpinning noradrenaline transport, coupling to ion gradients and non-competitive inhibition remain unknown. Here we present high-resolution complex structures of NET in two fundamental conformations: in the apo state, and bound to the substrate noradrenaline, an analogue of the χ-conotoxin MrlA (χ-MrlA EM ), bupropion or ziprasidone. The noradrenaline-bound structure clearly demonstrates the binding modes of noradrenaline. The coordination of Na + and Cl - undergoes notable alterations during conformational changes. Analysis of the structure of NET bound to χ-MrlA EM provides insight into how conotoxin binds allosterically and inhibits NET. Additionally, bupropion and ziprasidone stabilize NET in its inward-facing state, but they have distinct binding pockets. These structures define the mechanisms governing neurotransmitter transport and non-competitive inhibition in NET, providing a blueprint for future drug design.
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