학술논문

Connexin-aequorin chimerae report cytoplasmic calcium environments along trafficking pathways leading to gap junction biogenesis in living COS-7 cells.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Biological Chemistry; November 1998, Vol. 273 Issue: 45 p29822-9, 8p
Subject
Language
ISSN
00219258; 1083351X
Abstract
The cytoplasmic calcium environments along membrane trafficking pathways leading to gap junction intercellular communication channels at the plasma membrane were studied. Connexins, the constitutive proteins of gap junctions, were fused at their carboxyl terminus to the calcium-sensitive photoprotein aequorin. The cellular location of the chimeric proteins was determined by immunolocalization and subcellular fractionation. The generation of functional gap junctions by the connexin chimerae was monitored by the ability of the cells to exchange small dyes. Although aequorin fused to connexin-26 was nonfunctional, its ability to report Ca2+ and to form functional gap junctions was rescued by replacement of its cytoplasmic carboxyl tail with that of connexin-43. In COS-7 cells expressing these connexin-aequorin chimerae, calcium levels below the plasma membrane were higher (approximately 5 microM) than those in the cytoplasm (approximately 100 nM); gap junctions were able to transfer dyes under these conditions. Cytoplasmic levels of free calcium surrounding the ERGIC/Golgi reported by connexin-43 chimera (approximately 420 nM) were twice those measured by connexin-32 chimera (approximately 200 nM); both chimerae measured calcium levels substantially higher than those reported by a connexin-26 chimera (approximately 130 nM). Dispersion of the ERGIC and Golgi complex by brefeldin A led to a marked reduction in calcium levels. The results show that the various connexin chimerae were located in spatially different subcellular stores and that the ERGIC/Golgi regions of the cell maintain heterogeneous cytoplasmic domains of calcium. The implications of the subplasma-membrane Ca2+ levels on the gating of gap junctions are discussed.