Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5939458 | The American Journal of Pathology | 2011 | 11 Pages |
Gap junction proteins (connexins) facilitate intercellular communication and serve several roles in regulation of tissue function and remodeling. To examine the physiologic effects of depleting two prominent endothelial connexins, Cx40 and Cx43, transgenic mice were generated by breeding Cx40-deficient mice (Cx40â/â) with a vascular endothelial cell (VEC)-specific Cx43-deficient mouse strain (VEC Cx43â/â) to produce double-connexin knockout mice (VEC Cx43â/â/Cx40â/â). The life span in VEC Cx43â/â/Cx40â/â mice was dramatically shortened, which correlated with severe spontaneous lung abnormalities as the mice aged including increased fibrosis, aberrant alveolar remodeling, and increased lung fibroblast content. Moreover, VEC Cx43â/â/Cx40â/â mice exhibited cardiac hypertrophy and hypertension. Because VEC Cx43â/â/Cx40â/â mice demonstrated phenotypic hallmarks that were remarkably similar to those in mice deficient in caveolin-1, pulmonary caveolin expression was examined. Lungs from VEC Cx43â/â/Cx40â/â mice demonstrated significantly decreased expression of caveolin-1 and caveolin-2. This suggests that expression of caveolin-1 may be linked to expression of Cx40 and endothelial Cx43. Moreover, the phenotype of caveolin-1â/â mice and VEC Cx43â/â/Cx40â/â mice may arise via a common mechanism.