4.4 Article

Impaired Cx43 gap junction endocytosis causes morphological and functional defects in zebrafish

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 32, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E20-12-0797

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [RO1-GM55725, R15-HD080507]
  2. 2018 Lehigh University's Faculty Innovation Grant

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This study investigated the effects of dysregulated Cx43 gap junction endocytosis by deleting a region within the Cx43 CT domain. The deletion caused defective gap junction endocytosis and increased intercellular communication. The findings demonstrate that continuous Cx43 gap junction endocytosis is crucial for gap junction function and impaired endocytosis leads to significant physiological problems, particularly in cardiovascular development and function.
Gap junctions mediate direct cell-to-cell communication by forming channels that physically couple cells, thereby linking their cytoplasm, permitting the exchange of molecules, ions, and electrical impulses. Gap junctions are assembled from connexin (Cx) proteins, with connexin 43 (Cx43) being the most ubiquitously expressed and best studied. While the molecular events that dictate the Cx43 life cycle have largely been characterized, the unusually short half-life of Cxs of only 1-5 h, resulting in constant endocytosis and biosynthetic replacement of gap junction channels, has remained puzzling. The Cx43 C-terminal (CT) domain serves as the regulatory hub of the protein affecting all aspects of gap junction function. Here, deletion within the Cx43 CT (amino acids 256-289), a region known to encode key residues regulating gap junction turnover, is employed to examine the effects of dysregulated Cx43 gap junction endocytosis using cultured cells (Cx43(Delta 256-289)) and a zebrafish model (cx43(lh10)). We report that this CT deletion causes defective gap junction endocytosis as well as increased gap junction intercellular communication. Increased Cx43 protein content in cx-43(lh10) zebrafish, specifically in the cardiac tissue, larger gap junction plaques, and longer Cx43 protein half-lives coincide with severely impaired development. Our findings demonstrate for the first time that continuous Cx43 gap junction endocytosis is an essential aspect of gap junction function and, when impaired, gives rise to significant physiological problems as revealed here for cardiovascular development and function.

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