A rapid and sensitive assay of intercellular coupling by voltage imaging of gap junction networks
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2013
abstract:
Background: A variety of mechanisms that govern connexin channel gating and permeability regulate coupling in
gap junction networks. Mutations in connexin genes have been linked to several pathologies, including
cardiovascular anomalies, peripheral neuropathy, skin disorders, cataracts and deafness. Gap junction coupling and
its patho-physiological alterations are commonly assayed by microinjection experiments with fluorescent tracers,
which typically require several minutes to allow dye transfer to a limited number of cells. Comparable or longer
time intervals are required by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching experiments. Paired electrophysiological
recordings have excellent time resolution but provide extremely limited spatial information regarding network
connectivity.
Results: Here, we developed a rapid and sensitive method to assay gap junction communication using a
combination of single cell electrophysiology, large-scale optical recordings and a digital phase-sensitive detector to
extract signals with a known frequency from Vf2.1.Cl, a novel fluorescent sensor of plasma membrane potential.
Tests performed in HeLa cell cultures confirmed that suitably encoded Vf2.1.Cl signals remained confined within the
network of cells visibly interconnected by fluorescently tagged gap junction channels. We used this method to
visualize instantly intercellular connectivity over the whole field of view (hundreds of cells) in cochlear organotypic
cultures from postnatal mice. A simple resistive network model reproduced accurately the spatial dependence of
the electrical signals throughout the cellular network. Our data suggest that each pair of cochlear non-sensory cells
of the lesser epithelial ridge is coupled by ~1500 gap junction channels, on average. Junctional conductance was
reduced by 14% in cochlear cultures harboring the T5M mutation of connexin30, which induces a moderate
hearing loss in connexin30T5M/T5M knock-in mice, and by 91% in cultures from connexin30-/- mice, which are
profoundly deaf.
Conclusions: Our methodology allows greater sensitivity (defined as the minimum magnitude of input signal
required to produce a specified output signal having a specified signal-to-noise ratio) and better time resolution
compared to classical tracer-based techniques. It permitted us to dynamically visualize intercellular connectivity
down to the 10th order in non-sensory cell networks of the developing cochlea. We believe that our approach
is of general interest and can be seamlessly extended to a variety of biological systems, as well as to other
connexin-related disease conditions.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Connexins; Digital phase-sensitive detector; Dye coupling; Electrical coupling; Genetic deafness; Voltage sensitive dye
List of contributors:
Mammano, Fabio
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