| Literature DB >> 30042657 |
Mario Bortolozzi1,2,3.
Abstract
Connexin 32 (Cx32) is a fundamental protein in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) as its mutations cause the X-linked form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT1X), the second most common form of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy and a demyelinating disease for which there is no effective therapy. Since mutations of the GJB1 gene encoding Cx32 were first reported in 1993, over 450 different mutations associated with CMT1X including missense, frameshift, deletion and non-sense ones have been identified. Despite the availability of a sizable number of studies focusing on normal and mutated Cx32 channel properties, the crucial role played by Cx32 in the PNS has not yet been elucidated, as well as the molecular pathogenesis of CMT1X. Is Cx32 fundamental during a particular phase of Schwann cell (SC) life? Are Cx32 paired (gap junction, GJ) channels in myelinated SCs important for peripheral nerve homeostasis? The attractive hypothesis that short coupling of adjacent myelin layers by Cx32 GJs is required for efficient diffusion of K+ and signaling molecules is still debated, while a growing body of evidence is supporting other possible functions of Cx32 in the PNS, mainly related to Cx32 unpaired channels (hemichannels), which could be involved in a purinergic-dependent pathway controlling myelination. Here we review the intriguing puzzle of findings about Cx32 function and dysfunction, discussing possible directions for future investigation.Entities:
Keywords: CMT1X; CMTX1; Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease; Connexin 32; Cx32; Schwann cell; gap junction; hemichannel
Year: 2018 PMID: 30042657 PMCID: PMC6048289 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2018.00227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Figure 1Possible functions of Cx32 in myelinating SCs and topology of Cx32 mutations. (A) Electrical activity of myelinated nerves triggers axonal K+ release, whose recycling could involve Cx32 GJs located in SC paranodes and Schmidt–Lanterman incisures. Axonal firing also stimulates ATP release from volume-activated anion channels (VAACs; Fields and Ni, 2010) which induces P2Y-mediated Ca2+ increases in the cytosol and the mitochondrial matrix of the surrounding SCs via IP3 receptors (IP3R) of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU), respectively. The increase in the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) should be sufficient to trigger Cx32 hemichannel opening and ATP release, contributing to the intracellular and intercellular propagation of the Ca2+ signal. Interaction between Cx32 hemichannels and mitochondria may play a role in cell bioenergetics as found in liver of Cx32-null mice (Fowler et al., 2013). (B) Cx32 mutations belonging to classes 3-4-5 mentioned in the text are represented as colored circles (black-red-azure, respectively) associated to the correspondent WT amino acid (white circle), where the topology of Cx32 domains is derived from the all-atom model of Cx32 connexon in Carrer et al. (2018).
Figure 2In vitro analysis of human Cx32 GJ and hemichannel functionality. (A) Scheme of dual patch clamp experiment to derive the unitary GJ permeability to cAMP in an isolated pair of Cx32-WT transfected HeLa cells, as in Carrer et al. (2018). At time zero, cAMP is injected in cell 1 under whole-cell recording conditions (WC1) and its intercellular transfer is monitored by FRET variation (ΔR/R0) of CEPAC sensor. (B) Three representative frames illustrate successive stages of an experiment. Around 90 s after WC1, the whole-cell configuration is achieved also in cell 2 (WC2), delivering the same concentration of cAMP and deriving the junctional conductance Gj from the current ij elicited by a 10 mV voltage difference (Vj) between the two pipettes, as illustrated in the bright field image. (C,D) Time course of the cell-averaged FRET signal and the junctional conductance Gj from the experiment in (B). (E) A confocal z-stack was performed at the end of the experiment to derive cell 2 volume (Vcell 2), which is required to compute the single channel permeability Pu to cAMP, as described in Hernandez et al. (2007), where γ is the single channel conductance. (F) Scheme of patch clamp experiment to study the hemichannel gating by [Ca2+]i in a single Cx32-WT transfected HeLa cell. An IP3-dependent [Ca2+]i transient is stimulated by an extracellular puff containing 10 μM ATP. Cx32 hemichannel opening and closure were monitored in terms of membrane conductance variation (ΔGm) computed by the periodic application (at 1 Hz) of a +10 μV voltage step lasting 100 ms. Contribution to ΔGm by other Ca2+-activated channels was kept negligible by specific blockers contained in the extracellular solution. (G) Representative frame sequence of an experiment using Fura-Red dye. (H,I) Time course from the experiment in (G) of the cell-averaged Fura-Red ΔR/R0 and the membrane conductance variation ΔGm due to opening and closure of Cx32-WT hemichannels. For further details, see Carrer et al. (2018).