Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2201720 Neurochemistry International 2009 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The gap junction protein connexin36 (Cx36) is widely expressed in neurons and was previously shown to interact with the PDZ domain-containing protein zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1). We investigated whether Cx36 is also able to interact with other members of zonula occludens family of proteins, namely, ZO-2 and ZO-3, the former of which was reported to be co-localized with Cx36 at gap junctions in mouse retina. HeLa cells transfected with Cx36 and cultured βTC-3 cells were found to express ZO-2 and ZO-3, and both of these ZO proteins were co-localized with Cx36 at gap junctional cell–cell contacts. In lysates of Cx36-transfected HeLa cells, ZO-2 and ZO-3 were shown to co-immunoprecipitate with Cx36, whereas Cx36/ZO-2 association was absent in cells transfected with truncated Cx36 lacking its C-terminus SAYV PDZ interaction motif. In vitro pull-down assays revealed that Cx36 interacts with the PDZ1, but not with the other two PDZ domains in ZO-2 or ZO-3. Truncated Cx36 lacking its PDZ binding motif failed to bind the PDZ1 domain of either ZO-2 or ZO-3. A 14 amino acid peptide corresponding to the C-terminus of Cx36 was also shown to interact with the PDZ1 domains of ZO-2 and ZO-3, and this peptide inhibited the association of Cx36 with the PDZ1 domains of these ZO proteins. These results indicate that Cx36 associates with the first PDZ domain of ZO-2 and ZO-3 and that this association requires the C-terminus SAYV sequence in Cx36. These findings, together with the known association of ZO-2 with a variety of proteins, including transcription factors, suggest that ZO-2 may serve to anchor regulatory proteins at gap junctions composed of Cx36.

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