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      Pannexin1: a multifunction and multiconductance and/or permeability membrane channel

      1 , 1
      American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology
      American Physiological Society

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          Abstract

          Of the three pannexins in vertebrate proteomes, pannexin1 (Panx1) is the only one well characterized, and it is generally accepted that Panx1 functions as an ATP release channel for signaling to other cells. However, the ATP permeability of the channel is only observed with certain stimuli, including low oxygen, mechanical stress, and elevated extracellular potassium ion concentration. Otherwise, the Panx1 channel is selective for chloride ions and exhibits no ATP permeability when stimulated simply by depolarization to positive potentials. A third, irreversible activation of Panx1 follows cleavage of carboxyterminal amino acids by caspase 3. The selectivity/permeability properties of the caspase cleaved channel are unclear as it reportedly has features of both channel conformations. Here we describe the biophysical properties of the channel formed by the truncation mutant Panx1Δ378, which is identical to the caspase-cleaved protein. Consistent with previous findings for the caspase-activated channel, the Panx1Δ378 channel was constitutively active. However, like the voltage-gated channel, the Panx1Δ378 channel had high chloride selectivity, lacked cation permeability, and did not mediate ATP release unless stimulated by extracellular potassium ions. Thus, the caspase-cleaved Panx1 channel should be impermeable to ATP, contrary to previous claims.

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          Most cited references23

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          Pannexins, a family of gap junction proteins expressed in brain.

          Database search has led to the identification of a family of proteins, the pannexins, which share some structural features with the gap junction forming proteins of invertebrates and vertebrates. The function of these proteins has remained unclear so far. To test the possibility that pannexins underlie electrical communication in the brain, we have investigated their tissue distribution and functional properties. Here, we show that two of these genes, pannexin 1 (Px1) and Px2, are abundantly expressed in the CNS. In many neuronal cell populations, including hippocampus, olfactory bulb, cortex and cerebellum, there is coexpression of both pannexins, whereas in other brain regions, e.g., white matter, only Px1-positive cells were found. On expression in Xenopus oocytes, Px1, but not Px2 forms functional hemichannels. Coinjection of both pannexin RNAs results in hemichannels with functional properties that are different from those formed by Px1 only. In paired oocytes, Px1, alone and in combination with Px2, induces the formation of intercellular channels. The functional characteristics of homomeric Px1 versus heteromeric Px1/Px2 channels and the different expression patterns of Px1 and Px2 in the brain indicate that pannexins form cell type-specific gap junctions with distinct properties that may subserve different functions.
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            Pannexin-1 is required for ATP release during apoptosis but not for inflammasome activation.

            Apoptotic cell death is important for embryonic development, immune cell homeostasis, and pathogen elimination. Innate immune cells also undergo a very rapid form of cell death termed pyroptosis after activating the protease caspase-1. The hemichannel pannexin-1 has been implicated in both processes. In this study, we describe the characterization of pannexin-1-deficient mice. LPS-primed bone marrow-derived macrophages lacking pannexin-1 activated caspase-1 and secreted its substrates IL-1β and IL-18 normally after stimulation with ATP, nigericin, alum, silica, flagellin, or cytoplasmic DNA, indicating that pannexin-1 is dispensable for assembly of caspase-1-activating inflammasome complexes. Instead, thymocytes lacking pannexin-1, but not the P2X7R purinergic receptor, were defective in their uptake of the nucleic acid dye YO-PRO-1 during early apoptosis. Cell death was not delayed but, unlike their wild-type counterparts, Panx1(-/-) thymocytes failed to recruit wild-type peritoneal macrophages in a Transwell migration assay. These data are consistent with pannexin-1 liberating ATP and other yet to be defined "find me" signals necessary for macrophage recruitment to apoptotic cells.
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              P2X7 receptors mediate ATP release and amplification of astrocytic intercellular Ca2+ signaling.

              Modulation of synaptic transmission and brain microcirculation are new roles ascribed to astrocytes in CNS function. A mechanism by which astrocytes modify neuronal activity in the healthy brain depends on fluctuations of cytosolic Ca2+ levels, which regulate the release of "gliotransmitters" via an exocytic pathway. Under pathological conditions, however, the participation of other pathways, including connexin hemichannels and the pore-forming P2X7R, have been proposed but remain controversial. Through the use of genetically modified 1321N1 human astrocytoma cells and of spinal cord astrocytes derived from neonatal Cx43- and P2X7R-null mice, we provide strong evidence that P2X7Rs, but not Cx43 hemichannels, are sites of ATP release that promote the amplification of Ca2+ signal transmission within the astrocytic network after exposure to low divalent cation solution. Moreover, our results showing that gap junction channel blockers (heptanol, octanol, carbenoxolone, flufenamic acid, and mefloquine) are antagonists of the P2X7R indicate the inadequacy of using these compounds as evidence for the participation of connexin hemichannels as sites of gliotransmitter release.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology
                American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology
                American Physiological Society
                0363-6143
                1522-1563
                September 01 2018
                September 01 2018
                : 315
                : 3
                : C290-C299
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida
                Article
                10.1152/ajpcell.00302.2017
                29719171
                d2f5f97c-dd9f-4bcc-bbbd-d1d6f73dc305
                © 2018
                History

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