Rozental R, Srinivas M, Gökhan S, Urban M, Dermietzel R, Kessler J A, Spray D C, Mehler M F
Department of Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY 10461, USA.
Brain Res Brain Res Rev. 2000 Apr;32(1):57-71. doi: 10.1016/s0165-0173(99)00096-x.
Communication through gap junction channels provides a major signaling mechanism during early brain histogenesis, a developmental time during which neural progenitor cells are inexcitable and do not express ligand-gated channel responses to the major CNS neurotransmitters. Expression of different gap junction types during neurogenesis may therefore define intercellular pathways for transmission of developmentally relevant molecules. To better understand the molecular mechanism(s) by which growth and differentiation of neurons are modulated by gap junction channels, we have been examining the developmental effects of a specific set of cytokines on differentiation and gap junction expression in a conditionally immortalized mouse embryonic hippocampal neuronal progenitor cell line (MK31). When multipotent MK31 cells are in an uncommitted state, they uniformly express the neuroepithelial intermediate filament class VI marker, nestin, are strongly coupled by gap junctions composed of connexin43 (Cx43) and express connexin45 (Cx45) at the mRNA level. As these cells undergo neuronal lineage commitment and exit from cell cycle, they begin to express the early neurofilament marker, NF66, and coupling strength and expression of Cx43 begin to decline with concurrent expression of other connexin proteins, including Cx26, Cx33, Cx36, Cx40 and Cx45. Terminal neuronal differentiation is heralded by the expression of more advanced neurofilament proteins, increased morphologic maturation, the elaboration of inward currents and action potentials that possess mature physiological properties, and changing profiles of expression of connexin subtypes, including upregulation of Cx36 expression. These important developmental transitions are regulated by a complex network of cell cycle checkpoints. To begin to examine the precise roles of gap junction proteins in traversing these developmental checkpoints and in thus regulating neurogenesis, we have focused on individual members of two classes of genes involved in these seminal events: ID (inhibitor of differentiation)-1 and GAS (growth arrest-specific gene)5. When MK31 cells were maintained in an uncommitted state, levels of ID-1 mRNA were high and GAS5 transcripts were essentially undetectable. Application of cytokines that promote neuronal lineage commitment and cell cycle exit resulted in down-regulation of ID-1 and upregulation of GAS5 transcripts, whereas additional cytokine paradigms that promoted terminal neuronal differentiation resulted in the delayed down-regulation of GAS5 mRNA. Stable MK31 transfectants were generated for ID-1 and GAS5. In basal conditions, cellular proliferation was enhanced in the ID-1 transfectants and inhibited in the GAS5 transfectants when compared with control MK31 cells. When cytokine-mediated neurogenesis was examined in these transfected cell lines, constitutive expression of ID-1 inhibited and constitutive expression of GAS5 enhanced initial and terminal stages of neuronal differentiation, with evidence that terminal neuronal maturation in both transfectant lines was associated with decreased cellular viability, possibly due to the presence of conflicting cell cycle-associated developmental signals. These experimental reagents will prove to be valuable experimental tools to help define the functional interrelationships between changing profiles of connexin protein expression and cell cycle regulation during neuronal ontogeny in the mammalian brain. The present review summarizes the current state of research involving the temporal expression of such connexin types in differentiating hippocampal neurons and speculates on the possible role of these intercellular channels in the development and plasticity of the nervous system. In addition, we describe the functional properties and expression pattern of the newly discovered neuronal-specific gap junctional protein, Cx36, in the developing mouse fetal hippocampus and in the rat retina and brain.
通过缝隙连接通道进行的通讯是早期脑组织发生过程中的一种主要信号传导机制,在这个发育阶段,神经祖细胞不可兴奋,并且不表达对主要中枢神经系统神经递质的配体门控通道反应。因此,神经发生过程中不同类型缝隙连接的表达可能定义了发育相关分子传递的细胞间途径。为了更好地理解缝隙连接通道调节神经元生长和分化的分子机制,我们一直在研究一组特定细胞因子对条件永生化小鼠胚胎海马神经元祖细胞系(MK31)分化和缝隙连接表达的发育影响。当多能性MK31细胞处于未分化状态时,它们均匀表达神经上皮中间丝VI类标志物巢蛋白,通过由连接蛋白43(Cx43)组成的缝隙连接强烈耦联,并在mRNA水平表达连接蛋白45(Cx45)。随着这些细胞进行神经谱系定向分化并退出细胞周期,它们开始表达早期神经丝标志物NF66,Cx43的耦联强度和表达开始下降,同时表达其他连接蛋白,包括Cx26、Cx33、Cx36、Cx40和Cx45。更高级神经丝蛋白的表达、形态学成熟增加、具有成熟生理特性的内向电流和动作电位的形成以及连接蛋白亚型表达谱的变化,包括Cx36表达上调,预示着神经元终末分化。这些重要的发育转变受细胞周期检查点的复杂网络调控。为了开始研究缝隙连接蛋白在穿越这些发育检查点以及调节神经发生中的精确作用,我们专注于参与这些重要事件的两类基因的单个成员:ID(分化抑制因子)-1和GAS(生长停滞特异性基因)5。当MK31细胞维持在未分化状态时,ID-1 mRNA水平高,而GAS5转录本基本检测不到。应用促进神经谱系定向分化和细胞周期退出的细胞因子导致ID-1下调和GAS5转录本上调,而促进神经元终末分化的其他细胞因子模式导致GAS5 mRNA延迟下调。构建了ID-1和GAS5的稳定MK31转染细胞系。在基础条件下,与对照MK31细胞相比,ID-1转染细胞系中的细胞增殖增强,而GAS5转染细胞系中的细胞增殖受到抑制。当在这些转染细胞系中检测细胞因子介导的神经发生时,ID-1的组成性表达抑制,而GAS5的组成性表达增强神经元分化的初始和终末阶段,有证据表明两个转染细胞系中的神经元终末成熟与细胞活力降低有关,这可能是由于存在相互冲突的细胞周期相关发育信号。这些实验试剂将被证明是有价值的实验工具,有助于确定在哺乳动物脑神经元个体发生过程中连接蛋白表达谱变化与细胞周期调控之间的功能相互关系。本综述总结了目前关于在分化的海马神经元中此类连接蛋白类型的时间表达的研究现状,并推测这些细胞间通道在神经系统发育和可塑性中的可能作用。此外,我们描述了新发现的神经元特异性缝隙连接蛋白Cx36在发育中的小鼠胎儿海马以及大鼠视网膜和脑中的功能特性和表达模式。