The effect of covalent sulfhydryl modification on dopamine uptake by the human dopamine transporter was determined by rotating disc electrode voltammetry. A transporter construct, X5C, with five mutated cysteines (C90A, C135A, C306A, C319F, and C342A) and the constructs into which the wild-type cysteines were substituted back into X5C, one at a time, all showed nearly normal binding affinity for [(3)H]CFT and for cocaine, but they displayed significant reductions in K(m) and V(max) for DA uptake. Reaction of Cys-90 or Cys-306 with impermeant methanethiosulfonate derivatives enhanced dopamine uptake to a similar extent as the previously observed enhancement of [(3)H]CFT binding caused by the same reaction, suggesting that cocaine may bind preferentially to a conformation in the transport cycle. m-Tyramine increased the rate of reaction of (2-aminoethyl)methanethiosulfonate (MTSEA) with X-A342C, the construct with a cytoplasmic loop residue Cys-342 restored. This m-tyramine-induced increase in reactivity appeared to require the inward transport rather than the outward transport or external binding of m-tyramine, and it was prevented by cocaine. Thus, inward translocation of substrates may involve structural rearrangement of hDAT, which likely exposes Cys-342 to reaction with MTSEA, and Cys-342 may be located on a part of the transporter associated with cytoplasmic gating.