4.4 Article

Gap Junction Turnover Is Achieved by the Internalization of Small Endocytic Double-Membrane Vesicles

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 20, Issue 14, Pages 3342-3352

Publisher

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E09-04-0288

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health National Institute of General Medical Sciences [GM55725]
  2. Lehigh University

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Double-membrane-spanning gap junction (GJ) channels cluster into two-dimensional arrays, termed plaques, to provide direct cell-to-cell communication. GJ plaques often contain circular, channel-free domains (similar to 0.05-0.5 mu m in diameter) identified >30 y ago and termed nonjunctional membrane (NM) domains. We show, by expressing the GJ protein connexin43 (Cx43) tagged with green fluorescent protein, or the novel photoconvertible fluorescent protein Dendra2, that NM domains appear to be remnants generated by the internalization of small GJ channel clusters that bud over time from central plaque areas. Channel clusters internalized within seconds forming endocytic double-membrane GJ vesicles (similar to 0.18-0.27 mu m in diameter) that were degraded by lysosomal pathways. Surprisingly, NM domains were not repopulated by surrounding channels and instead remained mobile, fused with each other, and were expelled at plaque edges. Quantification of internalized, photoconverted Cx43-Dendra2 vesicles indicated a GJ half-life of 2.6 h that falls within the estimated half-life of 1-5 h reported for GJs. Together with previous publications that revealed continuous accrual of newly synthesized channels along plaque edges and simultaneous removal of channels from plaque centers, our data suggest how the known dynamic channel replenishment of functional GJ plaques can be achieved. Our observations may have implications for the process of endocytic vesicle budding in general.

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