首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 38 毫秒
1.
The tight junction, or zonula occludens, forms an intercellular barrier between epithelial cells within the gastrointestinal tract and liver and, by limiting the movement of water and solutes through the intercellular space, maintains the physicochemical separation of tissue compartments. The paracellular barrier properties of junctions are regulated and quite different among epithelia. The junction also forms an intramembrane barrier between the apical and basolateral membrane domains, contributing to segregation of biochemically distinct components of these plasma membrane surfaces. Here we briefly review three rapidly developing areas of medically relevant basic knowledge about the tight junction. First, we describe the presently incomplete knowledge of the molecular structure of the tight junction as a framework for understanding its functional properties. Second, we consider experimental evidence defining how the barrier properties of junctions are physiologically regulated and, third, how barrier properties are specifically altered in, and contribute to, pathologic processes affecting epithelia.  相似文献   

2.
Tight junctions are the most apical components of endothelial and epithelial intercellular cleft. In the endothelium these structures play an important role in the control of paracellular permeability to circulating cells and solutes. The only known integral membrane protein localized at sites of membrane–membrane interaction of tight junctions is occludin, which is linked inside the cells to a complex network of cytoskeletal and signaling proteins. We report here the identification of a novel protein (junctional adhesion molecule [JAM]) that is selectively concentrated at intercellular junctions of endothelial and epithelial cells of different origins. Confocal and immunoelectron microscopy shows that JAM codistributes with tight junction components at the apical region of the intercellular cleft. A cDNA clone encoding JAM defines a novel immunoglobulin gene superfamily member that consists of two V-type Ig domains. An mAb directed to JAM (BV11) was found to inhibit spontaneous and chemokine-induced monocyte transmigration through an endothelial cell monolayer in vitro. Systemic treatment of mice with BV11 mAb blocked monocyte infiltration upon chemokine administration in subcutaneous air pouches. Thus, JAM is a new component of endothelial and epithelial junctions that play a role in regulating monocyte transmigration.  相似文献   

3.
The function and intracellular localisation of the non-catalytic NH(2)-terminal region of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) are unclear. We investigated the targetting of the FAK NH(2)-terminal domain in HEK 293 and epithelial MDCK cells. Exogenous expression of a variety of GFP-fused and epitope-tagged NH(2) terminal domain constructs either including or lacking the major Tyr 397 autophosphorylation and Src-binding site targeted to nuclei and cell-cell junctions in HEK 293 cells and co-localised at junctions with occludin, and beta1 integrin subunits at junctions. Mutation of Tyr 397 also had no effect on localisation of the NH(2)-terminal domain. In contrast, constructs encoding either the kinase or focal adhesion targeting (FAT) domains but lacking the NH(2)-terminal region failed to localise to intercellular junctions or nuclei. The NH(2)-terminal domain was not associated with beta1 integrin subunits as indicated by co-immunoprecipitation experiments, but did co-localise with cortical actin filaments. The NH(2)-terminal domain also targetted to nuclei and intercellular junctions in MDCK cells, whereas full-length FAK localised only to focal adhesions in these cells. These results indicate that the FAK NH(2)-terminal domain targets to epithelial intercellular junctions and nuclei and suggest novel functions for FAK NH(2)-terminal domain fragments independent of Y397, kinase, and FAT domains.  相似文献   

4.
The connexins constitute a family of integral membrane proteins that form intercellular channels, enabling adjacent cells in solid tissues to directly exchange ions and small molecules. These channels assemble into distinct plasma membrane domains known as gap junctions. Gap junction intercellular communication plays critical roles in numerous cellular processes, including control of cell growth and differentiation, maintenance of tissue homeostasis and embryonic development. Gap junctions are dynamic plasma membrane domains, and there is increasing evidence that modulation of endocytosis and post-endocytic trafficking of connexins are important mechanisms for regulating the level of functional gap junctions at the plasma membrane. The emerging picture is that multiple pathways exist for endocytosis and sorting of connexins to lysosomes, and that these pathways are differentially regulated in response to physiological and pathophysiological stimuli. Recent studies suggest that endocytosis and lysosomal degradation of connexins is controlled by a complex interplay between phosphorylation and ubiquitination. This review summarizes recent progress in understanding the molecular mechanisms involved in endocytosis and post-endocytic sorting of connexins, and the relevance of these processes to the regulation of gap junction intercellular communication under normal and pathophysiological conditions. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: The Communicating junctions, composition, structure and characteristics.  相似文献   

5.
Peculiarities of ultrastructural organization and localization of early forms of avascular nonsynaptic types of junctions formed in 14-18-day-old rat embryos have been studied; cerebral structures different in their phylogenic relations (the sensomotor cortex and nucleus caudatus) are taken as an example. Five main types of nonsynaptic intercellular junctions have been revealed: desmosome-like, gap, symmetric, asymmetric and mixed junctions. They differ by their ultrastructural organization. These types of junctions make the main types of contacts: soma-somatic, dendro-somatic, dendro-dendritic, axo-somatic, axo-dendritic. Desmosomes form the greatest number of the contacts. The earliest and the most primitive are gap junctions; they, evidently, reflect functional activity of desmosome-like junctions. The mixed junctions, perhaps, reflect the developmental stages of the intercellular contacts of transition from one type of junctions into another. Localization peculiarities of the nonsynaptic intercellular contacts are demonstrated: glomerule-like formations, establishment of numerous contacts looking like a successive chain, and so on. For some other indices a longer period of intercellular contact formation in the nucleus caudatus is noted, comparing the sensomotor cortex, though the latter is a newer structural cerebral formation from the phylogenic point of view.  相似文献   

6.
During epithelial sheet formation, linear actin cables assemble at nascent adherens junctions. This process requires alpha-catenin and actin polymerization, although the underlying mechanism is poorly understood. Here, we show that formin-1 interacts with alpha-catenin, localizes to adherens junctions and nucleates unbranched actin filaments. Furthermore, disruption of the alpha-catenin-formin-1 interaction blocks assembly of radial actin cables and perturbs intercellular adhesion. A fusion protein of the beta-catenin-binding domain of alpha-catenin with the actin polymerization domains of formin-1 rescues formation of adherens junctions and associated actin cables in alpha-catenin-null keratinocytes. These findings provide new insight into how alpha-catenin orchestrates actin dynamics during intercellular junction formation.  相似文献   

7.
Gap junctions--clusters of intercellular channels built by connexins (Cx)--are thought to be important for vascular cell functions such as differentiation, control of tone, or growth. In the vascular system, gap junctions can be formed by four different connexins (Cx37, Cx40, Cx43 and Cx45). The permeability of these connexin-formed gap junctions determines the amount of intercellular coupling and can be modulated by several vasoactive substances such as prostacyclin or nitric oxide (NO). We demonstrate here that NO has specific effects on certain connexins. Using two different techniques--injection of a fluorescent dye in single cells as well as detection of the de novo formation of gap junctions by a flow cytometry based technique--we found that NO decreases the functional coupling in Cx37 containing gap junctions whereas it increases the de novo formation of gap junctions containing Cx40. We conclude that NO, in addition to its known vasomotor effects, has a novel role in controlling intercellular coupling resulting in opposing effects depending on the specific connexin expressed in the cells.  相似文献   

8.
The fine structure of the dicyemid mesozoan, Dicyema acuticephalum, from Octopus vulgaris, was studied with special attention to intercellular junctional complexes between various kinds of cells. Two types of intercellular junction, namely, adherens junctions and gap junctions, were found in both vermiform stages and in infusoriform embryos. Adherens junctions were classified into two types. Zonulae adherentes-like junctions were observed between adjacent peripheral cells at vermiform stages, between adjacent external cells of infusoriform embryos, and between members of groups of internal cells that covered the urn in infusoriform embryos. Maculae adherentes-like junctions were seen between a peripheral cell and an axial cell at vermiform stages. In infusoriform embryos, these junctions were observed between various types of cells, excluding urn cells. Gap junctions were found between adjacent peripheral cells at vermiform stages, whereas in infusoriform embryos these junctions were located between various types of cells excluding urn cells. Dicyemids might be the most primitive multicellular animals to possess these basic types of cell junctions. Ciliary rootlet systems at vermiform stages and in infusoriform embryos were unique in structure compared with those of other primitive multicellular animals. J Morphol 231:297–305, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
The changing morphology of intercellular junctions in renal morphogenesis during lamprey metamorphosis was followed using freeze-fracture replicas and morphometry. Gap junctions and particle aggregates among strands of occluding junctions are conspicuous in the differentiating podocytes of the renal corpuscle and in the early ciliated neck and proximal segments but not in the distal segment. The cells of the segmented nephron arise from alpha nephrogenic cells which have a focal aggregate (macula occludens) of 4.8 junctional strands. Upon the initiation of metamorphosis the number of strands increases to 8 in undifferentiated cells with either maculae or zonulae occludentes. Differentiation of both neck and proximal segments is accompanied by gradual transformation of a 7-strand zonula occludens to a 4-strand junction but it becomes more shallow in the latter segment. Two types of undifferentiated cell are recognized through five of the seven metamorphic stages. Cells of two types of distal segments begin differentiation at the midpoint of transformation and immediately show zonula occludens of different morphology. Distal segment I (pars recta) has 5 strands and a 0.250 mum depth whereas segment II has 8-9 strands with twice the apical-basal depth. The larval archinephric duct undergoes a moderate transformation in junctional morphology with the addition of 2 strands and no increase in apical-basal depth in zonulae occludentes during metamorphosis. Changes and development of types of intercellular junctions along the nephron in lampreys are discussed with reference to known regional functional specialization in this organism and with the morphology of renal tubular intercellular junctions in other vertebrates.  相似文献   

10.
Cells in mechanically active environments form extensive, cadherin-mediated intercellular junctions that are important in tissue remodeling and differentiation. Currently, it is unknown whether adherens junctions in connective tissue fibroblasts transmit mechanical signals and coordinate multicellular adaptations to physical forces. We hypothesized that cadherins mediate intercellular mechanotransduction by activating calcium-permeable, stretch-sensitive channels. Human gingival fibroblasts in suspension were plated on established homotypic monolayer cultures. The cells formed intercellular adherens junctions. Controlled mechanical forces were applied to intercellular junctions by electromagnets acting on cells containing internalized magnetite beads. At early but not later stages of intercellular attachment, force application visibly displaced magnetite bead-loaded cells and induced robust Ca(2+) transients (65 +/- 9.4 nm above base line). Similar Ca(2+) transients were induced by force application to anti-N-cadherin antibody-coated magnetite beads. Ca(2+) responses depended on influx of extracellular Ca(2+) through mechanosensitive channels because both Ca(2+) chelation and gadolinium chloride abolished the response and MnCl(2) quenched fura-2 fluorescence after force application. Force application induced accumulation of microinjected rhodamine-actin at intercellular contacts; actin assembly was inhibited by buffering intracellular calcium fluxes. Our results indicate that mechanical forces applied to adherens junctions activate stretch-sensitive calcium-permeable channels and increase actin polymerization. We suggest that N-cadherins in fibroblasts are intercellular mechanotransducers.  相似文献   

11.
Claudins ( approximately 23 kDa) with four transmembrane domains are major cell adhesion molecules working at tight junctions in vertebrates, where the intercellular space is tightly sealed (reviewed in ). We examined here the possible occurrence of claudin-like proteins in invertebrates, which do not bear typical tight junctions. Close blast searching of the C. elegans genome database identified four claudin-related, approximately 20-kDa integral membrane proteins (CLC-1 to -4), which showed sequence similarity to the vertebrate claudins. The expression and distribution of CLC-1 was then examined in detail by GFP technology as well as by immunofluorescence microscopy. CLC-1 was mainly expressed in the epithelial cells in the pharyngeal region of digestive tubes and colocalized with AJM-1 at their intercellular junctions. Then, to examine the possible involvement of CLC-1 in the barrier function, we performed RNA interference in combination with a tracer experiment: in CLC-1-deficient worms, the barrier function of the pharyngeal portion of the digestive tubes appeared to be severely affected. CLC-2 was expressed in seam cells in the hypodermis, and it also appeared to be involved in the hypodermis barrier. These findings indicated that multiple species of the claudin homologs, which are involved in the barrier function of the epithelium, exist in C. elegans.  相似文献   

12.
Gap junctions—clusters of intercellular channels built by connexins (Cx)—are thought to be important for vascular cell functions such as differentiation, control of tone, or growth. In the vascular system, gap junctions can be formed by four different connexins (Cx37, Cx40, Cx43 and Cx45). The permeability of these connexin-formed gap junctions determines the amount of intercellular coupling and can be modulated by several vasoactive substances such as prostacyclin or nitric oxide (NO). We demonstrate here that NO has specific effects on certain connexins. Using two different techniques—injection of a fluorescent dye in single cells as well as detection of the de novoformation of gap junctions by a flow cytometry based technique—we found that NO decreases the functional coupling in Cx37 containing gap junctions whereas it increases the de novoformation of gap junctions containing Cx40. We conclude that NO, in addition to its known vasomotor effects, has a novel role in controlling intercellular coupling resulting in opposing effects depending on the specific connexin expressed in the cells.  相似文献   

13.
Functional analysis of tight junctions   总被引:20,自引:0,他引:20  
Epithelial and endothelial cells are joined to each other via a set of intercellular junctions that differ in their morphological appearance, composition, and function. The tight junction or zonula occludens is the intercellular junction that regulates diffusion between cells and therefore allows endothelia and epithelia to form cellular barriers that separate compartments of different composition. This intercellular gate formed by tight junctions is not only highly regulated but is size- and ion-selective and, hence, represents a semipermeable diffusion barrier. In epithelia, tight junctions form a morphological and functional border between the apical and basolateral cell surface domains. They directly contribute to the maintenance of cell surface polarity by forming a fence that prevents apical/basolateral diffusion of lipids in the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane. Here we describe a set of assays that allow the analysis of tight junctions to determine their integrity and functional state.  相似文献   

14.
Tubulobulbar complexes may be part of the mechanism by which intercellular adhesion junctions are internalized by Sertoli cells during sperm release. These complexes develop in regions where Sertoli cells are attached to adjacent cells by intercellular adhesion junctions termed ectoplasmic specializations. At sites where Sertoli cells are attached to spermatid heads, tubulobulbar complexes consist of fingerlike processes of the spermatid plasma membrane, corresponding invaginations of the Sertoli cell plasma membrane, and a surrounding cuff of modified Sertoli cell cytoplasm. At the terminal ends of the complexes occur clusters of vesicles. Here we show that tubulobulbar complexes develop in regions previously occupied by ectoplasmic specializations and that the structures share similar molecular components. In addition, the adhesion molecules nectin 2 and nectin 3, found in the Sertoli cell and spermatid plasma membranes, respectively, are concentrated at the distal ends of tubulobulbar complexes. We also demonstrate that double membrane bounded vesicles are associated with the ends of tubulobulbar complexes and nectin 3 is present on spermatids, but is absent from spermatozoa released from the epithelium. These results are consistent with the conclusion that Sertoli cell and spermatid membrane adhesion domains are internalized together by tubulobulbar complexes. PKCalpha, a kinase associated with endocytosis of adhesion domains in other systems, is concentrated at tubulobulbar complexes, and antibodies to endosomal and lysosomal (LAMP1, SGP1) markers label the cluster of vesicles associated with the ends of tubulobulbar complexes. Our results are consistent with the conclusion that tubulobulbar complexes are involved with the disassembly of ectoplasmic specializations and with the internalization of intercellular membrane adhesion domains during sperm release.  相似文献   

15.
The structural basis for the permeability of the alveolar-capillary membrane to water-soluble solutes rests in part on the structure and function of its intercellular junctions and the pinocytotic vesicles within its cells. Intercellular junctions between endothelial cells of the pulmonary capillary bed differ both in permeability to enzyme tracers and in their structure. As determined by freeze fracture, the junctions in the arteriolar, capillary, and venular portion of the capillary network vary in complexity, and in the number of rows of particles constituting the junction. Because there are few particles associated with the junctions in the venular end of the capillary bed, these are considered to be the most permeable of the three types of vascular junctions. Epithelial junctions, in contrast, are impermeable to all enzyme tracers studied, and they are composed of a continuous, complex network of junctional fibrils. While intercellular junctions form seals of varying 'tightness,' pinocytotic vesicles provide a means for the transport of water-soluble macromolecules across the alveolar-capillary membrane.  相似文献   

16.
Lipid rafts are specific microdomains of plasma membrane which are enriched in cholesterol and sphingolipids. These domains seem to favour the interactions of particular proteins and the regulation of signalling pathways in the cells. Recent data have shown that among the proteins, which are preferentially localized in lipid rafts, are connexins that are the structural proteins of gap junctions. Since gap junctional intercellular communication is involved in various cellular processes and pathologies such as cancer, we were interested to review the various observations concerning this specific localization of connexins in lipid rafts and its consequences on gap junctional intercellular communication capacity. In particular, we will focus our discussion on the role of the lipid raft-connexin connection in cancer progression. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: The Communicating junctions, composition, structure and characteristics.  相似文献   

17.
《The Journal of cell biology》1990,111(3):1255-1263
The foot processes of glomerular epithelial cells of the mammalian kidney are firmly attached to one another by shallow intercellular junctions or slit diaphragms of unknown composition. We have investigated the molecular nature of these junctions using an antibody that recognizes ZO-1, a protein that is specific for the tight junction or zonula occludens. By immunoblotting the affinity purified anti-ZO-1 IgG recognizes a single 225-kD band in kidney cortex and in slit diaphragm-enriched fractions as in other tissues. When ZO-1 was localized by immunofluorescence in kidney tissue of adult rats, the protein was detected in epithelia of all segments of the nephron, but the glomerular epithelium was much more intensely stained than any other epithelium. Among tubule epithelia the signal for ZO-1 correlated with the known fibril content and physiologic tightness of the junctions, i.e., it was highest in distal and collecting tubules and lowest in the proximal tubule. By immunoelectron microscopy ZO-1 was found to be concentrated on the cytoplasmic surface of the tight junctional membrane. Within the glomerulus ZO-1 was localized predominantly in the epithelial foot processes where it was concentrated precisely at the points of insertion of the slit diaphragms into the lateral cell membrane. Its distribution appeared to be continuous along the continuous slit membrane junction. When ZO-1 was localized in differentiating glomeruli in the newborn rat kidney, it was present early in development when the apical junctional complexes between presumptive podocytes are composed of typical tight and adhering junctions. It remained associated with these junctions during the time they migrate down the lateral cell surface, disappear and are replaced by slit diaphragms. The distribution of ZO-1 and the close developmental relationship between the two junctions suggest that the slit diaphragm is a variant of the tight junction that shares with it at least one structural protein and the functional property of defining distinctive plasmalemmal domains. The glomerular epithelium is unique among renal epithelia in that ZO-1 is present, but the intercellular spaces are wide open and no fibrils are seen by freeze fracture. The presence of ZO-1 along slit membranes indicates that expression of ZO-1 alone does not lead to tight junction assembly.  相似文献   

18.
Summary Gap junctions contain intercellular channels which are formed by members of a group of related proteins called connexins. Connexins contain conserved transmembrane and extracellular domains, but unique cytoplasmic regions which may provide connexin-specific physiologic properties. We used polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification and cDNA library screening to clone DNA encoding a novel member of this gene family, rat connexin40 (Cx40). The derived rat Cx40 polypeptide contains 356 amino acids, with a predicted molecular mass of 40,233 Da. Sequence comparisons suggest that Cx40 is the mammalian homologue of chick connexin42, but it has predicted cytoplasmic regions that differ from previously described mammalian connexins. Southern blots of rat genomic DNA suggest that Cx40 is encoded by a single copy gene containing no introns within its coding region. Northern blots demonstrate that Cx40 is expressed in multiple tissues (including lung, heart, uterus, ovary, and blood vessels) and in primary cultures and established lines of vascular smooth muscle cells. Cx40 is coexpressed with connexin43 in several cell types, including A7r5 cells, which contain two physiologically distinct gap junctional channels. To demonstrate that Cx40 could form functional channels, we stably transfected communication-deficient Neuro2A cells with Cx40 DNA. These Cx40-transfected cells showed intercellular passage of microinjected Lucifer yellow CH. The expression of multiple connexins (such as Cx40 and Cx43) by a single cell may provide a mechanism by which cells regulate intercellular coupling through the formation of multiple channels  相似文献   

19.
Dynamics concerning certain intercellular junctions have been followed during the preimplantation period of development in mouse embryos. The morphological analysis of the preimplantational embryos has demonstrated, that at the initial stages of cleavage (2-4 blastomeres) the cells make contacts by means of nonspecific junctions. Specialized intercellular junctions appear at the stage of 8 blastomeres and are presented as dotted tight and gap junctions. When the embryo is developing from the stage of 8 up to the stage of 16 blastomeres, certain connective complexes appear, consisting of dotted or cord-like tight and gap junctions. At the late morula stage, the external blastomeres in the apical part have contacts with each other by means of cingular tight junctions. In this place a connective complex might emerge; it is displayed as a tight junction and one or two gap junctions. At the blastocyst stage desmosomes and adhision zones appear. Between trophectodermal cells a connective complex arises; it is presented in the slice as a tight cingular junction, desmosomes (as a rule two) and an adhision zone. Between cells of the internal cellular mass the intercellular junctions are presented as dotted tight and gap junctions. Cells of the polar trophoectoderm and cells of the internal cellular mass could have contacts by means of gap and dotted tight junctions.  相似文献   

20.
PECAM-1 (also known as CD31) is a cellular adhesion and signaling receptor comprising six extracellular immunoglobulin (Ig)-like homology domains, a short transmembrane domain and a 118 amino acid cytoplasmic domain that becomes serine and tyrosine phosphorylated upon cellular activation. PECAM-1 expression is restricted to blood and vascular cells. In circulating platelets and leukocytes, PECAM-1 functions largely as an inhibitory receptor that, via regulated sequential phosphorylation of its cytoplasmic domain, limits cellular activation responses. PECAM-1 is also highly expressed at endothelial cell intercellular junctions, where it functions as a mechanosensor, as a regulator of leukocyte trafficking and in the maintenance of endothelial cell junctional integrity. In this review, we will describe (1) the functional domains of PECAM-1 and how they contribute to its barrier-enhancing properties, (2) how the physical properties of PECAM-1 influence its subcellular localization and its ability to influence endothelial cell barrier function, (3) various stimuli that initiate PECAM-1 signaling and/or function at the endothelial junction and (4) cross-talk of PECAM-1 with other junctional molecules, which can influence endothelial cell function.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号