4.7 Article

The dynamic Nexus: gap junctions control protein localization and mobility in distinct and surprising ways

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-73892-6

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Funding

  1. NYIT Imaging Center
  2. NIH [R01 NS092466, R21NS116892]

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Gap junction (GJ) channels permit molecules, such as ions, metabolites and second messengers, to transfer between cells. Their function is critical for numerous cellular interactions, providing exchange of metabolites, signaling molecules, and ionic currents. GJ channels are composed of Connexin (Cx) hexamers paired across extracellular space and typically form large rafts of clustered channels, called plaques, at cell appositions. Cxs together with molecules that interact with GJ channels make up a supramolecular structure known as the GJ Nexus. While the stability of connexin localization in GJ plaques has been studied, mobility of other Nexus components has yet to be addressed. Colocalization analysis of several nexus components and other membrane proteins reveal that certain molecules are excluded from the GJ plaque (Aquaporin 4, EAAT2b), while others are quite penetrant ( lipophilic molecules, Cx30, ZO-1, Occludin). Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching of tagged Nexusassociated proteins showed that mobility in plaque domains is affected by mobility of the Cx proteins. These novel findings indicate that the GJ Nexus is a dynamic membrane organelle, with cytoplasmic and membrane-embedded proteins binding and diffusing according to distinct parameters.

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