Calmodulin-Mediated Regulation of Gap Junction Channels

Int J Mol Sci. 2020 Jan 12;21(2):485. doi: 10.3390/ijms21020485.

Abstract

Evidence that neighboring cells uncouple from each other as one dies surfaced in the late 19th century, but it took almost a century for scientists to start understanding the uncoupling mechanism (chemical gating). The role of cytosolic free calcium (Ca2+i) in cell-cell channel gating was first reported in the mid-sixties. In these studies, only micromolar [Ca2+]i were believed to affect gating-concentrations reachable only in cell death, which would discard Ca2+i as a fine modulator of cell coupling. More recently, however, numerous researchers, including us, have reported the effectiveness of nanomolar [Ca2+]i. Since connexins do not have high-affinity calcium sites, the effectiveness of nanomolar [Ca2+]i suggests the role of Ca-modulated proteins, with calmodulin (CaM) being most obvious. Indeed, in 1981 we first reported that a CaM-inhibitor prevents chemical gating. Since then, the CaM role in gating has been confirmed by studies that tested it with a variety of approaches such as treatments with CaM-inhibitors, inhibition of CaM expression, expression of CaM mutants, immunofluorescent co-localization of CaM and gap junctions, and binding of CaM to peptides mimicking connexin domains identified as CaM targets. Our gating model envisions Ca2+-CaM to directly gate the channels by acting as a plug ("Cork" gating model), and probably also by affecting connexin conformation.

Keywords: calcium; calmodulin; channel gating; chemical gating; connexins; gap junctions; innexins; membrane channels; pH; voltage gating.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Calcium / metabolism*
  • Calmodulin / genetics
  • Calmodulin / metabolism*
  • Cytosol / metabolism
  • Gap Junctions / metabolism*
  • Humans
  • Ion Channel Gating
  • Signal Transduction

Substances

  • Calmodulin
  • Calcium