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Vol. 301, Issue 2, 410-417, May 2002
Department of Pharmacology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville,
Tennessee
The neurotransmitter norepinephrine has been the focus of intense
investigation for nearly a century. With advances in technology come
novel approaches for testing hypotheses about the physiological roles
of norepinephrine and the genes involved in norepinephrine (NE)
biosynthesis, metabolism, and noradrenergic signaling. Homologous recombination techniques, which generate mice deficient in specific gene products, aid the integrated physiologist and pharmacologist in
the evaluation of protein function. Mouse models lacking proteins involved in NE biosynthesis or metabolism provide tools to expand the
knowledge previously gleaned from pharmacologic studies. Removal of the
biosynthetic enzymes tyrosine hydroxylase and dopamine-
-hydroxylase yield animals deficient in norepinephrine and have been used to further
examine the role of NE in diverse physiologic roles. Complete removal
of the vesicular monoamine transporter has demonstrated that mobilizing
neurotransmitters to vesicles is required for animal survival. Lastly,
the generation of animals in which the ability to remove NE from the
synapse is impaired (norepinephrine transporter deficiency and
extraneuronal monoamine transporter deficiency) and in which the
enzymes responsible for the metabolism of NE have been removed
(catechol-O-methyltransferase and monoamine oxidase) has
facilitated the study of the long-term physiological consequences of
altered NE homeostasis.
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