| Literature DB >> 34305529 |
Christopher A Piggott1, Yishi Jin1.
Abstract
Contacts between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and plasma membrane (PM) contain specialized tethering proteins that bind both ER and PM membranes. In excitable cells, ER-PM contacts play an important role in calcium signaling and transferring lipids. Junctophilins are a conserved family of ER-PM tethering proteins. They are predominantly expressed in muscles and neurons and known to simultaneously bind both ER- and PM-localized ion channels. Since their discovery two decades ago, functional studies using junctophilin-deficient animals have provided a deep understanding of their roles in muscles and neurons, including excitation-contraction coupling, store-operated calcium entry (SOCE), and afterhyperpolarization (AHP). In this review, we highlight key findings from mouse, fly, and worm that support evolutionary conservation of junctophilins.Entities:
Keywords: ER–PM tethers; RyR channels; calcium channels; jph-1; membrane contact site proteins; muscle excitation; synaptic transmission
Year: 2021 PMID: 34305529 PMCID: PMC8295595 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2021.709390
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 6.261
FIGURE 1Domain structures of junctophilin proteins and C. elegans junctophilin localization and function. (A) Domain structures of the four Mus musculus (mouse) junctophilins and sole members in Drosophila melanogaster (fly) and Caenorhabditis elegans (worm). Dashed lines indicate JPH2 cleavage sites. E169K mutation blocks binding to RyR and a 25 aa peptide flanking E169 prevents spontaneous RyR channel opening. Gene accession numbers are: M. musculus JPH1 (NP_065629.1), M. musculus JPH2 (NP_001192005.1), M. musculus JPH3 (NP_065630.1), M. musculus JPH4 (NP_796023.2), D. melanogaster Jp (NP_523525.2), and C. elegans JPH-1 (NP_492193.2). (B) Expression of GFP-tagged JPH-1 shows localization to JMCs in C. elegans muscles and neurons. Top: Head of a C. elegans animal showing GFP::JPH-1 in the pharyngeal muscle and body wall muscle. The white arrow indicates GFP::JPH-1 expression in a bundle of neuronal processes known as the nerve ring. Bottom left: In body wall muscle, JPH-1 localizes to rows of puncta, each one a JMC. Bottom right: In neurons, JPH-1 labels JMCs that form at the periphery of the soma. White asterisks mark neuronal nuclei. (C) jph-1 is required for the co-localization of UNC-68/RyR and EGL-19/LTCC in body wall muscle. jph-1(0) is a complete knockout. Scale bars, 5 μm. Panels (B,C) reproduced from Piggott et al. (2021).
Functions of junctophilins from invertebrates to mammals.
| Organism | Gene name | Tissue distribution | Deficiency phenotypes | References* |
| Mouse | JPH1 | Skeletal muscle | Perinatal lethality | |
| Deformed triads | ||||
| Impaired excitation-contraction coupling | ||||
| Reduced LTCC and RyR co-localization | ||||
| Reduced store-operated calcium entry | ||||
| Mouse | JPH2 | Skeletal and heart muscle | Embryonic lethality | |
| Fewer ER–PM contacts | ||||
| Deformed triads | ||||
| Reduced store-operated calcium entry | ||||
| Disrupted t-tubules | ||||
| Reduced LTCC and RyR co-localization | ||||
| Impaired excitation-contraction coupling | ||||
| Spontaneous calcium sparks | ||||
| Increased smooth muscle contraction | ||||
| Mouse | JPH3 and JPH4 | Brain | Motor discoordination | |
| Impaired memory | ||||
| Abolished afterhyperpolarization | ||||
| Reduced LTCC, RyR, SK channel co-localization | ||||
| Jp | Muscles and neurons | Reduced lifespan | ||
| Impaired flight | ||||
| Deformed muscle ultrastructure | ||||
| Cardiac dysfunction | ||||
| Neurodegeneration | ||||
| Muscles and neurons | Stunted growth | |||
| Motor discoordination | ||||
| Reduced LTCC and RyR co-localization | ||||
| Reduced axon regeneration | ||||
| Impaired synaptic transmission |