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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Changes in the expression and distribution of connexin 43 in isolated cultured adult guinea pig cardiomyocytes.

In the present study, we have investigated the changes in the expression and distribution of the principal gap-junction channel protein in ventricular muscle, connexin 43 (Cx43), during the first 2 weeks of culturing adult guinea pig cardiomyocytes at low density to prevent formation of cellular contacts. In freshly isolated cardiomyocytes, immunoreactive Cx43 occupied 6.5 +/- 0.4% of the pixel area of the cell, with 85% being localized to dense particles at the step-like end projections of the myocytes (intercalated disk regions) and 15% being within the sarcoplasm or along the lateral surface of the myocytes ("nondisk" distribution). During the myocytes' first 48 h in culture, immunoreactive Cx43 decreased by 27.5% from control values, to 4.7 +/- 0.5% of the cells' pixel area (P < 0.01). Cx43 particles also redistributed: after 48 h in culture approximately 90% of the immunoreactive Cx43 was localized in the sarcoplasm and nondisk regions of the myocyte. After 7 days, immunoreactive Cx43 only occupied 50% of the cells' control pixel area (P < 0.01) and was nearly uniform in its punctate pattern throughout the sarcoplasm. This distribution remained the same during the 2nd week in culture. Changes in myosin light chain staining during 8 days in culture largely paralleled those in Cx43 staining. Laser confocal microscopic analysis of double-immunolabeled myocytes that had been in culture for 24-48 h showed colocalization of Cx43 with clathrin in approximately 30% of the sarcoplasmic Cx43 particles. Thus it is demonstrated that the expression of Cx43 decreases significantly during the first 48 h in culture after myocyte isolation and that Cx43 also undergoes substantial redistribution but for the next 2 weeks remains more or less unchanged and at relatively high levels (approximately 50%). These data indicate that cardiomyocytes in isolation maintain their ability to reconnect with each other for up to at least 2 weeks. This is the first time that this property has been investigated in cultured adult ventricular cardiomyocytes.[1]

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