AI Article Synopsis

  • Gap junctions are channels that allow ions and small molecules to pass between neighboring cells, with connexin43 being the main protein involved in heart cells.
  • Rho GTPases, particularly RhoA, significantly influence gap junction communication, where its activation enhances intercellular signaling, while its inhibition weakens it.
  • The actin cytoskeleton plays a crucial role in this process, as stabilizing it can maintain gap junction function, and disrupting it can drastically reduce communication, revealing a new way RhoA can regulate these junctions.

Article Abstract

Gap junctions are clusters of transmembrane channels allowing a passive diffusion of ions and small molecules between adjacent cells. Connexin43, the main channel-forming protein expressed in ventricular myocytes, can associate with zonula occludens-1, a scaffolding protein linked to the actin cytoskeleton and to signal transduction molecules. The possible influence of Rho GTPases, major regulators of cellular junctions and of the actin cytoskeleton, in the modulation of gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) was examined. The activation of RhoA by cytoxic necrotizing factor 1 markedly enhanced GJIC, whereas its specific inhibition by the Clostridium botulinum C3 exoenzyme significantly reduced it. RhoA activity affects GJIC without major cellular redistribution of junctional plaques or changes in the Cx43 phosphorylation pattern. As these GTPases frequently act via the cortical cytoskeleton, the importance of F-actin in the modulation of GJIC was investigated by means of agents interfering with actin polymerization. Cytoskeleton stabilization by phalloidin slowed down the kinetics of channel rundown in the absence of ATP, whereas its disruption by cytochalasin D rapidly and markedly reduced GJIC despite ATP presence. Cytoskeleton stabilization by phalloidin markedly reduced the consequences of RhoA activation or inactivation. This mechanism appears to be the first described capable to both up- or down-regulate GJIC through RhoA activation or, conversely, inhibition. The inhibition of Rho downstream kinase effectors had no effect on GJIC. The present results provide further insight into the gating and regulation of junctional channels and identify a new downstream target for the small G-protein RhoA.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2662158PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M801556200DOI Listing

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