Abstract

We studied gap junction formation in pairs of Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing connexins that form functional hemichannels and found no correlation between junctional conductance ( G j) and whole-cell hemichannel conductances ( G hemi) within the first few hours of pairing. However, opening hemichannels to a threshold current stimulated a rapid G j increase. Moreover, cx46 hemichannel current stimulated cx40 G j even though cx40 and cx46 do not form heteromeric or heterotypic gap junctions. Initial growth rate and final steady-state level of stimulated G j were proportional to the product of hemichannel conductances. External calcium affected the growth rate of stimulated G j but not the final steady-state value. Time constants of formation were short in low [Ca 2+] out (3 min in 200 μM Ca 2+) and long in high [Ca 2+] out (15 min in 1 mM Ca 2+), but in oocyte pairs pretreated with lectins to reduce steric hindrance imposed by large membrane glycoproteins the time constant was short and Ca 2+-independent. We suggest that hemichannel activity stimulates G j by collapsing the extracellular volume between membranes to allow the end-to-end binding between hemichannels. These studies suggest the possibility that functional hemichannels could trigger or enhance junctional formation in vivo in response to appropriate stimuli.

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