Publication | Closed Access
Cloning and Expression of a <i>Xenopus</i> Embryonic Gap Junction Protein
161
Citations
20
References
1989
Year
OocyteDevelopmental BiologyGap JunctionsDevelopmental GeneticsGeneticsMedicineMorphogenesisMolecular GeneticsEarly Amphibian EmbryoReproductive BiologyEmbryonic DevelopmentGene ExpressionEarly EmbryosCell BiologyCellular PhysiologyCell DevelopmentEmbryology
Gap junctions in the early amphibian embryo may play a fundamental role in the regulation of differentiation by mediating the cell-to-cell transfer of chemical signals. A complementary DNA encoding a gap junction present in Xenopus oocytes and early embryos has now been cloned and sequenced. This protein sequence is homologous to the well-characterized gap junction structural proteins rat connexin32 and connexin43. RNA blot analysis of total Xenopus oocyte RNA showed hybridization to a single 1.6-kilobase band. This messenger RNA is abundant in oocytes, decreases to levels below the sensitivity of our assay by stage 15 (18 hours), and is not detectable in RNA from a number of adult organs. To confirm that the oocyte cDNA encodes a gap junction channel, the protein was over expressed in Xenopus oocytes by injection of RNA synthesized in vitro. Pairs of RNA-injected oocytes formed many more time- and voltage-sensitive cell-cell channels than water-injected pairs.
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