4.1 Article

Cadmium disorganises the scaffolding of gap and tight junction proteins in the hepatic cell line WIF B9

Journal

BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 105, Issue 12, Pages 561-575

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/boc.201200092

Keywords

cadmium; claudins and connexins; gap and tight junctions; hepatocytes

Categories

Funding

  1. multidisciplinary research program 'Toxicologie Nucleaire Environnementale'

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Background InformationHepatocytes, which perform the main functions of the liver, are particularly vulnerable to toxic agents such as cadmium, an environmental pollutant. To identify the molecular targets for cadmium in hepatocytes, we have studied the effects of CdCl2 on the hybrid cell line WIF-B9 that exhibits stable structural and functional hepatocytic polarity. ResultsWe showed that the toxicity of CdCl2 (1 mu M, 24h) resulted in a reduction in direct intercellular communication (via gap junctions) and in an increase in paracellular permeability (decrease in the sealing of tight junctions). These effects were not related to changes in the expression of the key proteins involved, Cx32 and claudin 2, the first being constitutive of gap junctions and the second of tight junctions in this cell line. Using immunofluorescence experiments, we observed a change in the location of Cx32 and claudin 2: these two proteins were less often found in the tight junction network that closes the bile canaliculi (BC). In control cells, Proximity Ligation Assay' (PLA Duolink (R)) has confirmed in situ that molecules of claudin 2 and Cx32 are very close to each other at the BC (probably less than 16nm). This was no longer the case after treatment with CdCl2. Localisation of occludin and Cx32 relative to each other was not modified by CdCl2, but CdCl2 increased the PLA signal between molecules of JAM-A and Cx32. Finally, examination of freeze-fracture replicas obtained from cultures treated with CdCl2 showed the disruption of the network of tight junctions and the depletion or the disintegration of the junctional plaques associated with tight junctions. ConclusionsThis study demonstrates in situ the changes induced by cadmium on the organisation of cell-cell junctions and points out the importance of the association Cx32/claudin 2 for the maintenance of normal hepatocyte functions.

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