4.7 Review

Connexins and Pannexins: Important Players in Neurodevelopment, Neurological Diseases, and Potential Therapeutics

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10092237

Keywords

connexins; gap junctions; neurodegenerative diseases; embryonic development

Funding

  1. Universidad del Rosario

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Cell-to-cell communication is crucial for embryonic development and dysfunction of connexins (Cxs) and pannexins (Panxs) can lead to diseases. Cxs play a pivotal role in embryogenesis and have been linked to both congenital and adult neurodegenerative diseases. Panxs, despite being structurally similar to Cxs, predominantly form channels connecting the cytoplasm to the extracellular space. Both Cxs and Panxs are involved in various stages of neuronal development in the nervous system.
Cell-to-cell communication is essential for proper embryonic development and its dysfunction may lead to disease. Recent research has drawn attention to a new group of molecules called connexins (Cxs) and pannexins (Panxs). Cxs have been described for more than forty years as pivotal regulators of embryogenesis; however, the exact mechanism by which they provide this regulation has not been clearly elucidated. Consequently, Cxs and Panxs have been linked to congenital neurodegenerative diseases such as Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease and, more recently, chronic hemichannel opening has been associated with adult neurodegenerative diseases (e.g., Alzheimer's disease). Cell-to-cell communication via gap junctions formed by hexameric assemblies of Cxs, known as connexons, is believed to be a crucial component in developmental regulation. As for Panxs, despite being topologically similar to Cxs, they predominantly seem to form channels connecting the cytoplasm to the extracellular space and, despite recent research into Panx1 (Pannexin 1) expression in different regions of the brain during the embryonic phase, it has been studied to a lesser degree. When it comes to the nervous system, Cxs and Panxs play an important role in early stages of neuronal development with a wide span of action ranging from cellular migration during early stages to neuronal differentiation and system circuitry formation. In this review, we describe the most recent available evidence regarding the molecular and structural aspects of Cx and Panx channels, their role in neurodevelopment, congenital and adult neurological diseases, and finally propose how pharmacological modulation of these channels could modify the pathogenesis of some diseases.

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