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Gap Junctional Coupling in Lenses from α(8) Connexin Knockout Mice
Lens fiber cell gap junctions contain α(3) (Cx46) and α(8) (Cx50) connexins. To examine the roles of the two different connexins in lens physiology, we have genetically engineered mice lacking either α(3) or α(8) connexin. Intracellular impedance studies of these lenses were used to measure junction...
Autores principales: | , , , , , |
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Formato: | Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
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The Rockefeller University Press
2001
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2233836/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11696604 |
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author | Baldo, George J. Gong, Xiaohua Martinez-Wittinghan, Francisco J. Kumar, Nalin M. Gilula, Norton B. Mathias, Richard T. |
author_facet | Baldo, George J. Gong, Xiaohua Martinez-Wittinghan, Francisco J. Kumar, Nalin M. Gilula, Norton B. Mathias, Richard T. |
author_sort | Baldo, George J. |
collection | PubMed |
description | Lens fiber cell gap junctions contain α(3) (Cx46) and α(8) (Cx50) connexins. To examine the roles of the two different connexins in lens physiology, we have genetically engineered mice lacking either α(3) or α(8) connexin. Intracellular impedance studies of these lenses were used to measure junctional conductance and its sensitivity to intracellular pH. In Gong et al. 1998, we described results from α(3) connexin knockout lenses. Here, we present original data from α(8) connexin knockout lenses and a comparison with the previous results. The lens has two functionally distinct domains of fiber cell coupling. In wild-type mouse lenses, the outer shell of differentiating fibers (see 1, DF) has an average coupling conductance per area of cell–cell contact of ∼1 S/cm(2), which falls to near zero when the cytoplasm is acidified. In the inner core of mature fibers (see 1, MF), the average coupling conductance is ∼0.4 S/cm(2), and is insensitive to acidification of the cytoplasm. Both connexin isoforms appear to contribute about equally in the DF since the coupling conductance for either heterozygous knockout (+/−) was ∼70% of normal and 30–40% of the normal for both −/− lenses. However, their contribution to the MF was different. About 50% of the normal coupling conductance was found in the MF of α(3) +/− lenses. In contrast, the coupling of MF in the α(8) +/− lenses was the same as normal. Moreover, no coupling was detected in the MF of α(3) −/− lenses. Together, these results suggest that α(3) connexin alone is responsible for coupling MF. The pH- sensitive gating of DF junctions was about the same in wild-type and α(3) connexin −/− lenses. However, in α(8) −/− lenses, the pure α(3) connexin junctions did not gate closed in the response to acidification. Since α(3) connexin contributes about half the coupling conductance in DF of wild-type lenses, and that conductance goes to zero when the cytoplasmic pH drops, it appears α(8) connexin regulates the gating of α(3) connexin. Both connexins are clearly important to lens physiology as lenses null for either connexin lose transparency. Gap junctions in the MF survive for the lifetime of the organism without protein turnover. It appears that α(3) connexin provides the long-term communication in MF. Gap junctions in DF may be physiologically regulated since they are capable of gating when the cytoplasm is acidified. It appears α(8) connexin is required for gating in DF. |
format | Text |
id | pubmed-2233836 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2001 |
publisher | The Rockefeller University Press |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-22338362008-04-22 Gap Junctional Coupling in Lenses from α(8) Connexin Knockout Mice Baldo, George J. Gong, Xiaohua Martinez-Wittinghan, Francisco J. Kumar, Nalin M. Gilula, Norton B. Mathias, Richard T. J Gen Physiol Original Article Lens fiber cell gap junctions contain α(3) (Cx46) and α(8) (Cx50) connexins. To examine the roles of the two different connexins in lens physiology, we have genetically engineered mice lacking either α(3) or α(8) connexin. Intracellular impedance studies of these lenses were used to measure junctional conductance and its sensitivity to intracellular pH. In Gong et al. 1998, we described results from α(3) connexin knockout lenses. Here, we present original data from α(8) connexin knockout lenses and a comparison with the previous results. The lens has two functionally distinct domains of fiber cell coupling. In wild-type mouse lenses, the outer shell of differentiating fibers (see 1, DF) has an average coupling conductance per area of cell–cell contact of ∼1 S/cm(2), which falls to near zero when the cytoplasm is acidified. In the inner core of mature fibers (see 1, MF), the average coupling conductance is ∼0.4 S/cm(2), and is insensitive to acidification of the cytoplasm. Both connexin isoforms appear to contribute about equally in the DF since the coupling conductance for either heterozygous knockout (+/−) was ∼70% of normal and 30–40% of the normal for both −/− lenses. However, their contribution to the MF was different. About 50% of the normal coupling conductance was found in the MF of α(3) +/− lenses. In contrast, the coupling of MF in the α(8) +/− lenses was the same as normal. Moreover, no coupling was detected in the MF of α(3) −/− lenses. Together, these results suggest that α(3) connexin alone is responsible for coupling MF. The pH- sensitive gating of DF junctions was about the same in wild-type and α(3) connexin −/− lenses. However, in α(8) −/− lenses, the pure α(3) connexin junctions did not gate closed in the response to acidification. Since α(3) connexin contributes about half the coupling conductance in DF of wild-type lenses, and that conductance goes to zero when the cytoplasmic pH drops, it appears α(8) connexin regulates the gating of α(3) connexin. Both connexins are clearly important to lens physiology as lenses null for either connexin lose transparency. Gap junctions in the MF survive for the lifetime of the organism without protein turnover. It appears that α(3) connexin provides the long-term communication in MF. Gap junctions in DF may be physiologically regulated since they are capable of gating when the cytoplasm is acidified. It appears α(8) connexin is required for gating in DF. The Rockefeller University Press 2001-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2233836/ /pubmed/11696604 Text en © 2001 The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Original Article Baldo, George J. Gong, Xiaohua Martinez-Wittinghan, Francisco J. Kumar, Nalin M. Gilula, Norton B. Mathias, Richard T. Gap Junctional Coupling in Lenses from α(8) Connexin Knockout Mice |
title | Gap Junctional Coupling in Lenses from α(8) Connexin Knockout Mice |
title_full | Gap Junctional Coupling in Lenses from α(8) Connexin Knockout Mice |
title_fullStr | Gap Junctional Coupling in Lenses from α(8) Connexin Knockout Mice |
title_full_unstemmed | Gap Junctional Coupling in Lenses from α(8) Connexin Knockout Mice |
title_short | Gap Junctional Coupling in Lenses from α(8) Connexin Knockout Mice |
title_sort | gap junctional coupling in lenses from α(8) connexin knockout mice |
topic | Original Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2233836/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11696604 |
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