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1.
The X-linked form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMTX) is associated with mutations in the gene encoding connexin32 (Cx32), which is expressed in Schwann cells. We have compared the functional properties of 11 Cx32 mutations with those of the wild-type protein by testing their ability to form intercellular channels in the paired oocyte expression system. Although seven mutations were functionally incompetent, four others were able to generate intercellular currents of the same order of magnitude as those induced by wild-type Cx32 (Cx32wt). In homotypic oocyte pairs, CMTX mutations retaining functional activity induced the development of junctional currents that exhibited changes in the sensitivity and kinetics of voltage dependence with respect to that of Cx32wt. The four mutations were also capable of interacting in heterotypic configuration with the wild-type protein, and in one case the result was a marked rectification of junctional currents in response to voltage steps of opposite polarity. In addition, the functional CMTX mutations displayed the same selective pattern of compatibility as Cx32wt, interacting with Cx26, Cx46, and Cx50 but failing to do so with Cx40. Although the functional mutations exhibited sensitivity to cytoplasmic acidification, which induced a >/=80% decrease in junctional currents, both the rate and extent of channel closure were enhanced markedly for two of them. Together, these results indicate that the functional consequences of CMTX mutations of Cx32 are of two drastically distinct kinds. The presence of a functional group of mutations suggests that a selective deficit of Cx32 channels may be sufficient to impair the homeostasis of Schwann cells and lead to the development of CMTX.  相似文献   

2.
Connexins are gap junction proteins that form aqueous channels to interconnect adjacent cells. Rat osteoblasts express connexin43 (Cx43), which forms functional gap junctions at the cell surface. We have found that ROS 17/2.8 osteosarcoma cells, UMR 106-01 osteosarcoma cells, and primary rat calvarial osteoblastic cells also express another gap junction protein, Cx46. Cx46 is a major component of plasma membrane gap junctions in lens. In contrast, Cx46 expressed by osteoblastic cells was predominantly localized to an intracellular perinuclear compartment, which appeared to be an aspect of the TGN as determined by immunofluorescence colocalization. Hela cells transfected with rat Cx46 cDNA (Hela/Cx46) assembled Cx46 into functional gap junction channels at the cell surface. Both rat lens and Hela/Cx46 cells expressed 53-kD (nonphosphorylated) and 68-kD (phosphorylated) forms of Cx46; however, only the 53-kD form was produced by osteoblasts. To examine connexin assembly, monomers were resolved from oligomers by sucrose gradient velocity sedimentation analysis of 1% Triton X-100-solubilized extracts. While Cx43 was assembled into multimeric complexes, ROS cells contained only the monomer form of Cx46. In contrast, Cx46 expressed by rat lens and Hela/Cx46 cells was assembled into multimers. These studies suggest that assembly and cell surface expression of two closely related connexins were differentially regulated in the same cell. Furthermore, oligomerization may be required for connexin transport from the TGN to the cell surface.  相似文献   

3.
Epithelial cells in primary ovine lens cultures express the gap junction proteins connexin43 (Cx43) and connexin49 (Cx49; a.k.a. MP70), a homologue of mouse connexin50. In contrast, lens cultures of differentiated, fiber-like cells (termed lentoid cells) express Cx49 and connexin46 (Cx46), but not Cx43. To investigate the regulation of lens cell gap junctions by protein kinase C (PKC), differentiating lens cultures were treated with the PKC activator 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (beta-TPA). Within 10 min, beta-TPA significantly inhibited the transfer of Lucifer Yellow dye between epithelial, but not lentoid, cells. This inhibition was correlated with the phosphorylation of Cx43 and was followed by the gradual disappearance of Cx43 from cell interfaces. The protein kinase inhibitor staurosporine prevented Cx43 phosphorylation and the loss of Cx43 from intercellular junctions. Following treatment of cultures with beta-TPA for 2-6 hr, Cx49 disappeared from epithelial cell interfaces, and by 24 hr of beta-TPA treatment, levels of Cx49 detected on immunoblots of purified epithelial membrane fractions had also diminished significantly. The beta-TPA-induced loss of Cx49 both from regions of epithelial cell contact and from isolated membranes was correlated with the disappearance of Cx49 mRNA. In contrast to the epithelial connexins, the lentoid connexins Cx49 and Cx46 were unaffected by even extended beta-TPA treatment. In spite of lentoid dye transfer being refractory to beta-TPA, significant levels of PKC-alpha (a beta-TPA-sensitive isoform) were detected in the lentoid cell. The response of lens gap junctions to beta-TPA depends upon the stage of differentiation and the complement of connexins expressed. The contrasting effects of beta-TPA on Cx43 and Cx49 in lens epithelial cells indicate a fundamental difference in the regulation of these connexin proteins in the developing mammalian lens.  相似文献   

4.
In the ocular lens, gap junctional communication is a key component of homeostatic mechanisms preventing cataract formation. Gap junctions in rodent lens fibers contain two known intercellular channel-forming proteins, connexin50 (Cx50) and Cx46. Since targeted ablation of Cx46 has been shown to cause senile-type nuclear opacities, it appears that Cx50 alone cannot meet homeostatic requirements. To determine if lens pathology arises from a reduction in levels of communication or the loss of a connexin-specific function, we have generated mice with a targeted deletion of the Cx50 gene. Cx50-null mice exhibited microphthalmia and nuclear cataracts. At postnatal day 14 (P14), Cx50-knockout eyes weighed 32% less than controls, whereas lens mass was reduced by 46%. Cx50-knockout lenses also developed zonular pulverulent cataracts, and lens abnormalities were detected by P7. Deletion of Cx50 did not alter the amounts or distributions of Cx46 or Cx43, a component of lens epithelial junctions. In addition, intercellular passage of tracers revealed the persistence of communication between all cell types in the Cx50-knockout lens. These results demonstrate that Cx50 is required not only for maintenance of lens transparency but also for normal eye growth. Furthermore, these data indicate that unique functional properties of both Cx46 and Cx50 are required for proper lens development.  相似文献   

5.
Intercellular gap junction channels are thought to form when oligomers of connexins from one cell (connexons) register and pair with connexons from a neighboring cell en route to forming tightly packed arrays (plaques). In the current study we used the rat mammary BICR-M1Rk tumor cell line to examine the trafficking, maturation, and kinetics of connexin43 (Cx43). Cx43 was conclusively shown to reside in the Golgi apparatus in addition to sites of cell-cell apposition in these cells and in normal rat kidney cells. Brefeldin A (BFA) blocked Cx43 trafficking to the surface of the mammary cells and also prevented phosphorylation of the 42-kD form of Cx43 to 44- and 46-kD species. However, phosphorylation of Cx43 occurred in the presence of BFA while it was still a resident of the ER or Golgi apparatus yielding a 43-kD form of Cx43. Moreover, the 42- and 43-kD forms of Cx43 trapped in the ER/Golgi compartment were available for gap junction assembly upon the removal of BFA. Mammary cells treated with BFA for 6 h lost preexisting gap junction "plaques," as well as the 44- and 46-kD forms of Cx43 and functional coupling. These events were reversible 1 h after the removal of BFA and not dependent on protein synthesis. In summary, we provide strong evidence that in BICR-M1Rk tumor cells: (a) Cx43 is transiently phosphorylated in the ER/Golgi apparatus, (b) Cx43 trapped in the ER/Golgi compartment is not subject to rapid degradation and is available for the assembly of new gap junction channels upon the removal of BFA, (c) the rapid turnover of gap junction plaques is correlated with the loss of the 44- and 46-kD forms of Cx43.  相似文献   

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PURPOSE: To investigate the role of the gap junction protein connexin43 (Cx43), which is predominantly expressed in lens epithelial cells in the control of lens development and organization. METHODS: Newborn mice in which the Cx43 gene was disrupted by homologous recombination were used. Lenses from Cx43 (-/-) mice and wild-type littermates were processed by using 2% glutaraldehyde fixation for light and transmission electron microscopy and by freezing in liquid nitrogen for light and confocal microscopy of immunofluorescence in cryosections. RESULTS: In wild-type mice, Cx43 was immunolocalized to apical and lateral regions of lens epithelial cells and throughout the cornea, iris, ciliary body, and retina. In the bow, or equatorial, region of the lens, Cx43 disappeared gradually at the margins of the epithelial layer, whereas major intrinsic polypeptide, MP26, and alpha-crystallins were only detected in differentiated fiber cells. Ultrastructural studies revealed that epithelial cells and epithelial fiber cells were connected by large gap junctions. Lens fiber cells were closely apposed to apical boundaries of epithelial cells and apposed to one another along their entire lengths. In Cx43 (-/-) mice, epithelial cells were connected more loosely. The distribution of MP26 and alpha-crystallin in bow region fiber cells in Cx43 (-/-) lenses was not distinguishable from that in the lenses of wild-type mice. Cx46 and Cx50 were also expressed in superficial and cortical fiber cells, with similar distributions in Cx43 (-/-) and wild-type mice. However, organization of appositional membranes between lens fiber cells and between fiber and epithelial cells differed dramatically in the Cx43 (-/-) lens. In contrast to the close apposition of cells in lenses of normal mice, fiber cells in Cx43 (-/-) lenses were largely separated from apical surfaces of epithelial cells, and large vacuolar spaces were apparent between fiber cells, most prominently in deeper cortical regions. CONCLUSIONS: The normal differentiation of lens fiber cells in the bow region in lenses of Cx43 (-/-) mice, evidenced by similar distributions of Cx46, Cx50, MP26, and alpha-crystallin, suggests that the expression of Cx43 is not required for this process. However, these lenses exhibit grossly dilated extracellular spaces and intracellular vacuoles, indicative of early stages of cataract formation. These changes suggest that osmotic balance within the lens is markedly altered in Cx43 (-/-) animals, highlighting the importance of intercellular communication mediated by lens epithelial Cx43 gap junctions in the function of this tissue.  相似文献   

9.
Gap junction channels are formed by members of the connexin gene family and mediate direct intercellular communication through linked hemichannels (connexons) from each of two adjacent cells. While for most connexins, the hemichannels appear to require an apposing hemichannel to open, macroscopic currents obtained from Xenopus oocytes expressing rat Cx46 suggested that some hemichannels can be readily opened by membrane depolarization [Paul, D. L., Ebihara, L., Takemoto, L. J., Swenson, K. I. & Goodenough, D. A. (1991), J. Cell Biol. 115, 1077-1089]. Here we demonstrate by single channel recording that hemichannels comprised of rat Cx46 exhibit complex voltage gating consistent with there being two distinct gating mechanisms. One mechanism partially closes Cx46 hemichannels from a fully open state, gammaopen, to a substate, gammasub, about one-third of the conductance of gammaopen; these transitions occur when the cell is depolarized to inside positive voltages, consistent with gating by transjunctional voltage in Cx46 gap junctions. The other gating mechanism closes Cx46 hemichannels to a fully closed state, gammaclosed, on hyperpolarization to inside negative voltages and has unusual characteristics; transitions between gammaclosed and gammaopen appear slow (10-20 ms), often involving several transient substates distinct from gammasub. The polarity of activation and kinetics of this latter form of gating indicate that it is the mechanism by which these hemichannels open in the cell surface membrane when unapposed by another hemichannel. Cx46 hemichannels display a substantial preference for cations over anions, yet have a large unitary conductance (approximately 300 pS) and a relatively large pore as inferred from permeability to tetraethylammonium (approximately 8.5 angstroms diameter). These hemichannels open at physiological voltages and could induce substantial cation fluxes in cells expressing Cx46.  相似文献   

10.
An indirect immunogold labeling technique was applied to replicas of freeze-fractured membranes of rapidly frozen unfixed cells. The endogenous gap junction protein Cx43 of BICR/M1Rk rat mammary tumor cells was preferentially identified in quasi-crystalline gap junction plaques as were the transfected connexins Cx40, Cx43, and Cx45 in HeLa (human cervical carcinoma) cells. With this method we also detected contact areas with dispersed gap junction channels which are the only structural correlation for endogenous Cx45 in HeLa wild-type cells where no gap junction plaques exist. In double-transfected HeLa cells a colocalization of Cx40 and Cx43 was occasionally detected in quasi-crystalline gap junction plaques, whereas in contact areas with dispersed particles only one Cx type was present. Our results indicate that functional gap junction channels exist outside the quasi-crystalline plaques.  相似文献   

11.
Most cells exchange ions and small metabolites via gap junction channels. These channels are made of two hemichannels (connexons), each formed by the radial arrangement of six connexin (Cx) proteins. Connexins span the bilayer four times (M1-M4) and have both amino- and carboxy-termini (NT, CT) at the cytoplasmic side of the membrane, forming two extracellular loops (E1, E2) and one inner (IL) loop. The channels are regulated by gates that close with cytosolic acidification (e.g., CO2 treatment) or increased calcium concentration, possibly via calmodulin activation. Although gap junction regulation is still unclear, connexin domains involved in gating are being defined. We have recently focused on the CO2 gating sensitivity of Cx32, Cx38 and various mutants and chimeras expressed in Xenopus oocytes and studied by double voltage clamp. Cx32 is weakly sensitive to CO2, whereas Cx38 is highly sensitive. A Cx32 chimera containing the second half of the inner loop (IL2) of Cx38 was as sensitive to CO2 as Cx38, indicating that this domain plays an important role. Deletion of CT by 84% did not affect CO2 sensitivity, but replacement of 5 arginines (R) with asparagines (N) at the beginning of CT (C1) greatly enhanced the CO2 sensitivity of Cx32. This suggests that whereas most of CT is irrelevant, positive charges of C1 maintain the CO2 sensitivity of Cx32 low. As a hypothesis we have proposed a model that involves charge interaction between negative residues of the beginning of IL (IL1) and positive residues of either C1 or IL2. Open and closed channels would result from IL1-C1 and IL1-IL2 interactions, respectively.  相似文献   

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13.
The ability of certain connexins to form open hemichannels has been exploited to study the pore structure of gap junction (hemi)channels. Cysteine scanning mutagenesis was applied to cx46 and to a chimeric connexin, cx32E(1)43, which both form patent hemichannels when expressed in Xenopus oocytes. The thiol reagent maleimido-butyryl-biocytin was used to probe 12 cysteine replacement mutants in the first transmembrane segment and two in the amino-terminal segment. Maleimido-butyryl-biocytin was found to inhibit channel activity with cysteines in two equivalent positions in both connexins: I33C and M34C in cx32E(1)43 and I34C and L35C in cx46. These two positions in the first transmembrane segment are thus accessible from the extracellular space and consequently appear to contribute to the pore lining. The data also suggest that the pore structure is complex and may involve more than one transmembrane segment.  相似文献   

14.
The cytoplasmic calcium environments along membrane trafficking pathways leading to gap junction intercellular communication channels at the plasma membrane were studied. Connexins, the constitutive proteins of gap junctions, were fused at their carboxyl terminus to the calcium-sensitive photoprotein aequorin. The cellular location of the chimeric proteins was determined by immunolocalization and subcellular fractionation. The generation of functional gap junctions by the connexin chimerae was monitored by the ability of the cells to exchange small dyes. Although aequorin fused to connexin-26 was nonfunctional, its ability to report Ca2+ and to form functional gap junctions was rescued by replacement of its cytoplasmic carboxyl tail with that of connexin-43. In COS-7 cells expressing these connexin-aequorin chimerae, calcium levels below the plasma membrane were higher (approximately 5 microM) than those in the cytoplasm (approximately 100 nM); gap junctions were able to transfer dyes under these conditions. Cytoplasmic levels of free calcium surrounding the ERGIC/Golgi reported by connexin-43 chimera (approximately 420 nM) were twice those measured by connexin-32 chimera (approximately 200 nM); both chimerae measured calcium levels substantially higher than those reported by a connexin-26 chimera (approximately 130 nM). Dispersion of the ERGIC and Golgi complex by brefeldin A led to a marked reduction in calcium levels. The results show that the various connexin chimerae were located in spatially different subcellular stores and that the ERGIC/Golgi regions of the cell maintain heterogeneous cytoplasmic domains of calcium. The implications of the subplasma-membrane Ca2+ levels on the gating of gap junctions are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Intercellular communication is mediated by specialized cell-cell contact areas known as gap junctions. Connexins are the constitutive proteins of gap junction intercellular channels. Various cell expression systems are used to express connexins and, in turn, these expression systems can then be tested for their ability to form functional cell-cell channels. In this review, expression of murine endogenous connexins in primary cells and established cell lines is compared with results obtained by expression of exogenous connexins in Xenopus oocytes and cultured mammalian cells. In addition, first reports on characterization of connexin-deficient mice are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Reduced gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) has been noted in many types of neoplastic cells and may contribute to the neoplastic phenotype. This study assessed GJIC (by fluorescent dye-coupling) and gap junction protein (connexin) expression in mouse and human lung carcinoma cell lines and investigated whether reduced GJIC was involved in their neoplastic phenotype. Dye-coupling and connexin43 (Cx43) expression were much lower in most of the carcinoma lines (16 of 22) compared to nontransformed lung epithelial cells. Other connexins were not detected. A poorly communicating mouse lung carcinoma cell line (E9) was transfected with Cx43 or transduced with Cx32 and several stable clones were isolated that had 2- to 4-fold increased dye coupling. When evaluated for growth in vitro, the population doubling times were increased and the saturation densities were decreased in the clones. When assessed for tumorigenicity, the parental E9 cells formed tumors with a 100% incidence (6/6 mice), whereas the clones varied in tumorigenic response (0-88% incidence). The best communicating clone (E9-2) was not tumorigenic. The highly communicating Cx32 clone, E9/32-9, gave a tumor incidence of 88%. These results suggest that restoration of GJIC by forced connexin expression can reduce the growth and tumorigenicity of lung carcinoma cells in a connexin-specific manner.  相似文献   

17.
The identification of gap-junctional proteins (connexins) and the preparation of related antibodies provides new tools to study patterns of intercellular communication in tumors. Focusing on the biology of human bladder carcinoma, we compared the expression of gap-junctional proteins (connexins Cx26, Cx32, and Cx43) with a dye-coupling assay for gap-junctional intercellular communication in three cell lines with different urothelial differentiation. The cell lines HCV-29, RT4, and J82 were initially grown as monolayers of different ages. Connexin expression was found mostly positive over the time of culture and found constantly negative only in J82 cells for Cx26 and HCV-29 cells for Cx32. In HCV-29 cells, Cx26 increased in positivity over the time of culture. Western blotting with the antibodies confirmed the findings. Comparisons of dye transfer using Lucifer Yellow showed an increase of coupling in the normal urothelial cell line HCV-29 in contrast to a decrease of coupling in the tumor cell lines. Data were extended by multicellular spheroid (MCS) co-cultures with the stromal fibroblast line N1. In three-dimensional cultures as MCSs, Cx26 was increased in proximity of RT4 tumor cells to fibroblasts, and positivity was maintained in J82 cells. E-cadherin expression in cell lines showed no change in dependence of growth state. The data suggest that Cx26 plays a role in negative growth control or differentiation of urothelial cells. Preliminary comparative data on normal and neoplastic urothelium show all three connexins in normal urothelium, in contrast to varying amounts of Cx43 and low amounts of Cx32 in tumors and evident loss of Cx26 in low-grade tumors. Discrepancies between monolayer and MCS cultures are most likely due to higher differentiation in MCSs, and the continuation of systematic work with heterologous MCSs is indicated for more information on the role of gap-junctional proteins in human tumors.  相似文献   

18.
Ovarian follicles from days 13, 14, 15, and 16 and corpora lutea (CL) from days 2, 4, 8, 12, and 15 of the estrous cycle were evaluated for the presence of connexins by immunohistochemistry. In addition, CL from days 5, 10, and 15 of the estrous cycle were used for immunofluorescent detection of Cx43 followed by image analysis, and for Western immunoblot. In all tissues, staining for all connexins appeared punctate, indicating the presence of assembled gap junctions. Cx26 was present in the ovarian surface epithelium, stroma, and blood vessels within the stroma and hilus, and in the CL. In healthy antral follicles, Cx26 was present only in the theca layer, whereas Cx43 was present in granulosa and theca layers. In the majority of atretic follicles, connexins were not detected, but in 13% of the atretic follicles, Cx43 was present in the theca layer. Cx32 was detected in the blood vessels of ovarian stroma and in the CL, and Cx43 was detected in the CL. Localization and/or expression of connexins depended on stage of luteal development. Western analysis demonstrated that expression of Cx32 in luteal tissues was similar across the estrous cycle. The area of positive staining for Cx43 and expression of Cx43 in luteal tissues decreased (p < 0.05) as the estrous cycle progressed. The pattern of expression of connexins indicates that gap junctional proteins may be important in the regulation of folliculogenesis and follicular atresia, as well as growth, differentiation, and regression of the CL.  相似文献   

19.
Neoplastic transformation is often associated with aberrant gap junctional intercellular communication. We assessed mutations and expression of the connexin43 (Cx43) gene in 49 intracranial meningiomas. SSCP analyses followed by direct DNA sequencing showed GCG-->GTG (Ala-->Val) transition mutation in codon 253 of the cytoplasmic carboxyl terminal of the Cx43 gene in 1 of 31 (3%) benign meningiomas and 1 of 14 (7%) anaplastic meningiomas. The same base change was present in normal tissue from these patients and also in 4 of 80 (5%) DNA samples extracted from lymphocytes of healthy Europeans, suggesting that this constitutes a newly identified Cx43 polymorphism. Western blot analyses showed expression of phosphorylated P1 (45 kD) and P2 (47 kD) Cx43 as well as the unphosphorylated form (42 kD) in 11 of 14 (79%) benign meningiomas. In contrast, the P2 form was not detectable in the majority (7 of 9; 78%) of atypical and anaplastic meningiomas. Since the presence of the P2 form is often associated with optimal function of the Cx43, these results suggest that loss or impaired gap junctional cell to cell communication may be associated with meningiomas displaying more rapid growth and a less favorable prognosis.  相似文献   

20.
Gap junctions mediate cell-cell communication in almost all tissues and are composed of channel-forming integral membrane proteins, termed connexins [1-3]. Connexin43 (Cx43) is the most widely expressed and the most well-studied member of this family. Cx43-based cell-cell communication is regulated by growth factors and oncogenes [3-5], although the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood as cellular proteins that interact with connexins have yet to be identified. The carboxy-terminal cytosolic domain of Cx43 contains several phosphorylation sites and potential signalling motifs. We have used a yeast two-hybrid protein interaction screen to identify proteins that bind to the carboxy-terminal tail of Cx43 and thereby isolated the zona occludens-1 (ZO-1) protein. ZO-1 is a 220 kDa peripheral membrane protein containing multiple protein interaction domains including three PDZ domains and a Src homology 3 (SH3) domain [6-9]. The interaction of Cx43 with ZO-1 occurred through the extreme carboxyl terminus of Cx43 and the second PDZ domain of ZO-1. Cx43 associated with ZO-1 in Cx43-transfected COS7 cells, as well as endogenously in normal Rat-1 fibroblasts and mink lung epithelial cells. Confocal microscopy revealed that endogenous Cx43 and ZO-1 colocalised at gap junctions. We suggest that ZO-1 serves to recruit signalling proteins into Cx43-based gap junctions.  相似文献   

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