Abstract

The gap junction protein Connexin43 (Cx43) is highly regulated by phosphorylation at over a dozen sites by probably at least as many kinases. This Cx43 “kinome” plays an important role in gap junction assembly and turnover. We sought to gain a better understanding of the interrelationship of these phosphorylation events particularly related to src activation and Cx43 turnover. Using state-of-the-art live imaging methods, specific inhibitors and many phosphorylation-status specific antibodies, we found phospho-specific domains in gap junction plaques and show evidence that multiple pathways of disassembly exist and can be regulated at the cellular and subcellular level. We found Src activation promotes formation of connexisomes (internalized gap junctions) in a process involving ERK-mediated phosphorylation of S279/282. Proteasome inhibition dramatically and rapidly restored gap junctions in the presence of Src and led to dramatic changes in the Cx43 phospho-profile including to increased Y247, Y265, S279/282, S365, and S373 phosphorylation. Lysosomal inhibition, on the other hand, nearly eliminated phosphorylation on Y247 and Y265 and reduced S368 and S373 while increasing S279/282 phosphorylation levels. We present a model of gap junction disassembly where multiple modes of disassembly are regulated by phosphorylation and can have differential effects on cellular signaling.

Highlights

  • Gap junctions are specialized membrane domains composed of tens to thousands of channels that permit intercellular exchange of ions and members of the metabolome of

  • We report that there are phospho-specific subdomains in gap junction plaques and saw that formation of connexisomes was associated with activated Src

  • We show that Src mediated downregulation of gap junction size and number could be overcome by proteasome inhibition and led to 4.4-fold increase in pY247 levels while pY265, another src site, decreased, arguing that pY247 was preserved within the gap junction

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Summary

Introduction

Gap junctions are specialized membrane domains composed of tens to thousands of channels that permit intercellular exchange of ions and members of the metabolome of

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Conclusion

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