1. Connexin-dependent signaling in neuro-hormonal systems
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Ilaria Potolicchio, Almira Hadzovic-Dzuvo, Silvia Velazquez-Garcia, Orhan Lepara, Dina Kapić, Esad Ćosović, Zakira Mornjacovic, Amina Valjevac, Valentina Cigliola, Paolo Meda, and Philippe Klee
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Kidney Cortex ,Vasopressins ,Dopamine ,Central nervous system ,Biophysics ,Connexin ,Endocrine System ,Biology ,Oxytocin ,Biochemistry ,Models, Biological ,Connexins ,Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Renin ,medicine ,Endocrine system ,Animals ,Humans ,Insulin ,Secretion ,Endocrine gland ,Cx36, Cx40, diabetes, hypertension ,030304 developmental biology ,Neurons ,0303 health sciences ,Cell Biology ,Hormone ,Hormones ,Multicellular organism ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Female ,Pancreas ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The advent of multicellular organisms was accompanied by the development of short- and long-range chemical signalling systems, including those provided by the nervous and endocrine systems. In turn, the cells of these two systems have developed mechanisms for interacting with both adjacent and distant cells. With evolution, such mechanisms have diversified to become integrated in a complex regulatory network, whereby individual endocrine and neuro-endocrine cells sense the state of activity of their neighbors and, accordingly, regulate their own level of functioning. A consistent feature of this network is the expression of connexin-made channels between the (neuro)hormone-producing cells of all endocrine glands and secretory regions of the central nervous system so far investigated in vertebrates. This review summarizes the distribution of connexins in the mammalian (neuro)endocrine systems, and what we know about the participation of these proteins on hormone secretion, the life of the producing cells, and the action of (neuro)hormones on specific targets. The data gathered since the last reviews on the topic are summarized, with particular emphasis on the roles of Cx36 in the function of the insulin-producing beta cells of the endocrine pancreas, and of Cx40 in that of the renin-producing juxta-glomerular epithelioid cells of the kidney cortex. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: The Communicating junctions, composition, structure and characteristics.
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