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AII amacrine cells discriminate between heterocellular and homocellular locations when assembling connexin36-containing gap junctions

Authors :
Meyer, Arndt
Hilgen, Gerrit
Dorgau, Birthe
Sammler, Esther M.
Weiler, Reto
Monyer, Hannah
Dedek, Karin
Hormuzdi, Sheriar G.
Source :
Journal of Cell Science
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Company of Biologists, 2014.

Abstract

Electrical synapses (gap junctions) rapidly transmit signals between neurons and are composed of connexins. In neurons, connexin36 (Cx36) is the most abundant isoform; however, the mechanisms underlying formation of Cx36-containing electrical synapses are unknown. We focus on homocellular and heterocellular gap junctions formed by an AII amacrine cell, a key interneuron found in all mammalian retinas. In mice lacking native Cx36 but expressing a variant tagged with enhanced green fluorescent protein at the C-terminus (KO-Cx36-EGFP), heterocellular gap junctions formed between AII cells and ON cone bipolar cells are fully functional, whereas homocellular gap junctions between two AII cells are not formed. A tracer injected into an AII amacrine cell spreads into ON cone bipolar cells but is excluded from other AII cells. Reconstruction of Cx36–EGFP clusters on an AII cell in the KO-Cx36-EGFP genotype confirmed that the number, but not average size, of the clusters is reduced – as expected for AII cells lacking a subset of electrical synapses. Our studies indicate that some neurons exhibit at least two discriminatory mechanisms for assembling Cx36. We suggest that employing different gap-junction-forming mechanisms could provide the means for a cell to regulate its gap junctions in a target-cell-specific manner, even if these junctions contain the same connexin.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219533
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cell Science
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....95774ab71d26f921aa5b4993dfc38abe