Concepedia

TLDR

Connexin43 is a member of the highly homologous connexin family of gap junction proteins. The study investigates how connexin monomers assemble into functional gap junction plaques by comparing connexin43 biosynthesis in cell types with differing gap junction formation abilities. Metabolic radiolabeling and immunoprecipitation were used to examine connexin43 biosynthesis and phosphorylation in these cell lines. The authors showed that connexin43 is phosphorylated to a 46‑kDa P2 form only in communication‑competent cells, and that inducing junctional communication in deficient cells restores phosphorylation, indicating a strong correlation between phosphorylation and functional gap junction assembly.

Abstract

Connexin43 is a member of the highly homologous connexin family of gap junction proteins. We have studied how connexin monomers are assembled into functional gap junction plaques by examining the biosynthesis of connexin43 in cell types that differ greatly in their ability to form functional gap junctions. Using a combination of metabolic radiolabeling and immunoprecipitation, we have shown that connexin43 is synthesized in gap junctional communication-competent cells as a 42-kD protein that is efficiently converted to a approximately 46-kD species (connexin43-P2) by the posttranslational addition of phosphate. Surprisingly, certain cell lines severely deficient in gap junctional communication and known cell-cell adhesion molecules (S180 and L929 cells) also expressed 42-kD connexin43. Connexin43 in these communication-deficient cell lines was not, however, phosphorylated to the P2 form. Conversion of S180 cells to a communication-competent phenotype by transfection with a cDNA encoding the cell-cell adhesion molecule L-CAM induced phosphorylation of connexin43 to the P2 form; conversely, blocking junctional communication in ordinarily communication-competent cells inhibited connexin43-P2 formation. Immunohistochemical localization studies indicated that only communication-competent cells accumulated connexin43 in visible gap junction plaques. Together, these results establish a strong correlation between the ability of cells to process connexin43 to the P2 form and to produce functional gap junctions. Connexin43 phosphorylation may therefore play a functional role in gap junction assembly and/or activity.

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