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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 1, 2001, 21(15):5397-5405
Gap Junctions Mediate Electrical Signaling and
Ensuing Cytosolic Ca2+ Increases between Chromaffin
Cells in Adrenal Slices: A Role in Catecholamine Release
Agnès O.
Martin,
Marie-Noëlle
Mathieu,
Claude
Chevillard, and
Nathalie C.
Guérineau
Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Médicale (INSERM) U469, Centre National de la Recherche
Scientifique/INSERM de Pharmacologie et d'Endocrinologie, 34094 Montpellier CEDEX 5, France
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ABSTRACT |
In adrenal chromaffin cells, a rise in cytosolic calcium
concentration ([Ca2+]i) is a key event in the
triggering of catecholamine exocytosis after splanchnic nerve
activation. Action potential- or nicotine-induced [Ca2+]i transients are well described in
individual chromaffin cells, but whether they remain spatially confined
to the stimulated cell or propagate to adjacent cells is not yet known.
To address this issue, the spatiotemporal organization of electrical
and associated Ca2+ events between chromaffin cells
was investigated using the patch-clamp technique and real-time confocal
imaging in rat acute adrenal slices. Spontaneous or electrically evoked
action potential-driven [Ca2+]i transients were
simultaneously detected in neighboring cells. This was likely
attributable to gap junction-mediated electrotonic communication, as
shown by (1) the bidirectional reflection of voltage changes monitored
between cell pairs, (2) Lucifer yellow (LY) diffusion between cells
exhibiting spontaneous synchronized [Ca2+]i
transients, and (3) the reduction of LY diffusion using the uncoupling
agent carbenoxolone. Furthermore, transcripts encoding two connexins
(Cx36 and Cx43) were found in single chromaffin cells. This gap
junctional coupling was activated after a synaptic-like application of
nicotine that mediated synchronous multicellular [Ca2+]i increases. In addition, nicotinic
stimulation of a single cell triggered catecholamine release in coupled
cells, as shown by amperometric detection of secretory events.
Functional coupling between chromaffin cells in situ may
represent an efficient complement to synaptic transmission to amplify
catecholamine release after synaptic stimulation of a single excited
chromaffin cell.
Key words:
electrical propagation; gap junction coupling; rat
adrenal slices; chromaffin cells; real-time confocal microscopy; catecholamine release; nicotinic stimulation
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INTRODUCTION |
In adrenal tissue, the physiological
stimulus for catecholamine secretion from chromaffin cells is the
synaptic release of acetylcholine, which increases membrane
excitability leading to cytosolic Ca2+
elevations (for review, see Douglas, 1968 ; Kidokoro and Ritchie, 1980 ;
Wakade, 1981 ). To date, the relationships between electrical activity,
[Ca2+]i increases, and exocytosis
underlying stimulation-secretion coupling have been mainly studied at
the single cell level, either in dissociated chromaffin cells in
culture or more recently in chromaffin cells in situ using
acute slice preparations (Voets et al., 1999 ; Albillos et al., 2000 ;
Voets, 2000 ). Because of the anatomical organization of chromaffin
cells into discrete cell complexes within the medulla (Hillarp, 1946 ),
it is, however, of physiological interest to characterize
stimulus-secretion coupling at the cell cluster level. It is currently
proposed that each cluster functions as an independent unit to release
catecholamines after activation of the splanchnic nerve (Iijima et al.,
1992 ). But whether each chromaffin cell exocytoses in an autonomous
manner after co-activation of its own synaptic inputs (Coupland, 1965 ) and/or whether chromaffin cells may also communicate between themselves to spatially and temporally harmonize their intracellular transduction signals remains an open question. As reported by Kajiwara et al. (1997) , the spreading of electrical activity between chromaffin cells
induced by transmural stimulation of the splanchnic nerve would be
mostly dependent on nerve fiber activity rather than cell-to-cell
coupling, leading to simultaneous excitation of all the chromaffin
cells belonging to the same cluster. However, fast cell-to-cell
communication mechanisms such as gap junction-mediated coupling may
also be involved in the generation of simultaneous co-activation in
adjoining chromaffin cells. Propagation of action potentials between
chromaffin cells via electronic coupling was previously postulated to
amplify the secretory signal to ensure massive release of
catecholamines in the intact gland (Ceña et al., 1983 ). More
recently, a junctional pathway coupling chromaffin cells in
situ has been reported to potentially underlie the simultaneous firing of a cell cluster (Moser, 1998 ).
In the present study, we addressed the issue of the involvement of gap
junctions between chromaffin cells and their role in catecholamine
release. We therefore investigated the spatiotemporal organization of
both electrical activity and ensuing
[Ca2+]i increases between chromaffin
cells in rat adrenal acute slices after single cell electrical or
cholinergic stimulation. We showed that
[Ca2+]i increases induced in response to
spontaneous or evoked action potentials or to iontophoretic application
of nicotine can be concomitantly observed in several chromaffin cells
adjoining the stimulated one. This is likely to involve a gap
junction-mediated pathway. Moreover, single cell stimulation led to
spike-like secretory events resulting from catecholamine exocytosis in
neighboring coupled cells. We propose here an additional mechanism
mediating catecholamine secretion that might occur preferentially
during episodes of low synaptic activity when only few chromaffin cells are synaptically stimulated.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Adrenal slice preparation. Acute adrenal slices were
prepared according to the technique previously described by Barbara and Takeda (1996) . Briefly, the adrenal glands were removed from 12- to
16-week-old Wistar female rats that had been killed by decapitation after cervical dislocation. After keeping the glands in ice-cold saline
for 2 min, a gland was glued onto an agarose cube and transferred to
the stage of a vibratome (Microslicer, DTK-1000, D.S.K; Dosaka, Kyoto, Japan). Slices of 250 µm thickness were then cut with a razor
blade and transferred to a storage chamber maintained at 32°C,
containing Ringer's saline (in mM): 125 NaCl,
2.5 KCl, 2 CaCl2, 1 MgCl2,
1.25 NaH2PO4, 26 NaHCO3, and 12 glucose, buffered to pH 7.4. The
saline was continuously bubbled with carbogen (95% O2 and 5% CO2). As
reported for the anterior pituitary (Guérineau et al., 1998 ),
acute adrenal slices were suitable for patch-clamp recording and
Ca2+ signal imaging immediately after
cutting. To obtain optical and/or electrophysiological recordings,
slices were then transferred to a recording chamber attached to the
stage of an upright microscope fitted with differential interference
contrast optics (Axioskop FS; Zeiss, Le Pecq, France) and continuously
superfused with Ringer's saline at 30°C.
Confocal imaging of cytosolic calcium.
Ca2+ changes were routinely monitored with
a real-time (30-480 frames/sec) confocal laser-scanning microscope
equipped with an Ar-Kr laser (Odyssey XL with InterVision 1.5.1 software; Noran Instruments, Middleton, WI). Cells were viewed with a
63× 0.9 NA achroplan water-immersion objective (Zeiss). The largest
detection slit (100 µm) of the confocal microscope was used for
[Ca2+]i measurements, giving bright
images with a 3.1 µm axial resolution. Slices were loaded with the
Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent probe Oregon
Green 488 BAPTA-1 by intermittent exposure to 15 µM Oregon Green 488 BAPTA-1 AM
(Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) for 20-30 min at 32°C, delivered onto
a cell field with a blunt pipette (Bonnefont et al., 2000 ). Oregon
Green 488 BAPTA-1 was excited through a 488 nm bandpass filter, and the emitted fluorescence was collected through a 515 nm barrier filter. To
follow the time course of Oregon Green 488 BAPTA-1 emission changes,
the bright overtime tool of the software package was applied to live
images (120 images/sec, averaging four frames). Because Oregon Green
488 BAPTA-1 is a single-wavelength dye, its emission is a function of
both intracellular Ca2+ and dye
concentrations. [Ca2+]i changes were
expressed as the F/Fmin
ratio, where Fmin was the minimum
fluorescence intensity measured during the recording (Mollard et al.,
1995 ). No detectable difference was noted between slices used just
after cutting or after several hours (up to 8 hr) in the storage
chamber. Acquired data and images were then processed for analysis with
IgorPro 3.16 (Wavemetrics, Lake Oswego, OR), NIH Image 1.6.0, and Adobe
Photoshop 5.0.2 software.
Electrophysiology. All experiments were performed in the
whole-cell configuration of the patch-clamp technique (Hamill et al.,
1981 ). Patch pipettes were pulled to a resistance of 4-8 M from
borosilicate glass (1.5 mm outer diameter, 1.17 mm inner diameter) and
filled with the following internal solution (in mM): 140 potassium-gluconate, 2 MgCl2, 1.1 EGTA, 5 HEPES, that was titrated to pH
7.2 with KOH. The membrane potential of a single chromaffin cell or
cell pairs was recorded under current-clamp conditions using an EPC-9
dual patch-clamp amplifier (Heka Electronik, Lambrecht/Pfalz, Germany)
and filtered at 3 kHz. Intercellular junctional currents were monitored
under dual voltage-clamp conditions (Neyton and Trautmann, 1985 ) using
a modified intrapipette solution (in mM: 140 Cs+-gluconate, 2 ATP, 2 MgCl2, 1.1 EGTA, 5 HEPES) and filtered off-line with a Kaiser low-pass filter (Igor Filter Design Laboratory software, version 3.1; Wavemetrics). For combined experiments in which membrane potential was simultaneously recorded with
Ca2+ events, Oregon Green 488 BAPTA-1 in
free acid form (10 µM) was directly added to
the internal pipette solution. In some experiments, membrane potential
was recorded in the perforated patch-clamp configuration using
amphotericin B (0.5 mg/ml in the standard intrapipette solution), as
described (Albillos et al., 2000 ). Cells with an access resistance >50
M were discarded. Signals were acquired and analyzed using Pulse + PulseFit software (version 8.5; Heka Electronik) on a G4 Macintosh computer.
Dye transfer. The fluorescent dye Lucifer yellow (LY) (1 mM) was introduced into cells using sharp
microelectrodes or via passive diffusion through the patch pipette. In
this case, the cells were patched for few minutes before image
acquisition. Dye transfer between co-active coupled cells was
visualized with confocal microscopy using the 488 nm-centered
wavelength of the laser beam.
Single cell RT-PCR. Single cell RT-PCR was performed as
previously described (Lambolez et al., 1992 ). Patch pipettes were filled with 10 µl of autoclaved internal
K+-gluconate solution. After breaking the
patch, cell contents were collected by applying negative pressure to
the patch pipette. The pipette's content was expelled into an
Eppendorf microtube containing 20 U of ribonuclease (RNase) inhibitor
(Roche, Meylan, France). The tube was then immediately frozen in liquid
nitrogen and kept at 80°C until processed. The sample was denatured
at 70°C for 5 min in the presence of 25 µM
hexamers, and reverse transcription (RT) was performed in 20 µl of RT
buffer containing: 200 U of Moloney murine leukemia virus
reverse transcriptase (Life Technologies, Cergy Pontoise, France), 20 U
of RNase inhibitor, 10 mM dithiothreitol, and 0.6 mM of each dNTP (Roche), for 3 hr at 37°C. The
reaction was stopped by heating at 95°C for 5 min. Because of the
high amounts of dopamine -hydroxylase (D H) in chromaffin cells, a
single PCR was sufficient to detect the messengers. However, the
amplification of mRNA encoding connexins (Cxs) required a nested PCR.
PCRs were performed using a T-gradient thermal cycler (Biometra,
Göttingen, Germany). All PCR amplifications were achieved using
5-8 µl of RT product or first PCR product in 20 µl of PCR buffer
containing 1.5 mM MgCl2,
0.2 mM dNTP, 1 µM of each
primer, and 1U of DyNAzyme EXT polymerase (Finnzymes, Expoo, Finland). For the first PCR, the initial melt at 95°C (5 min) was followed by
35 cycles [92°C (1 min), 64°C (1 min), and 72°C (2 min)] and final extension at 72°C (7 min). For the unique D H PCR and the nested Cx PCR, the protocol used was the following: after the initial
melt at 95°C (2 min), 10 cycles were performed: 94°C (10 sec),
64°C for D H or 57°C for Cxs (30 sec), 72°C (45 sec) followed by 40 identical cycles with 5 sec increments added to each cycle to an
extension time (72°C), and a final extension at 72°C (7 min). For
each experiment, a blank (without mRNA) and a positive control (total
adrenal mRNA) were prepared. PCR products were submitted to
electrophoresis on 2% agarose gel in Tris Borate EDTA buffer
containing ethidium bromide for visualization. The primer sequences for
specific amplifications of D H (Melia et al., 1994 ), Cx36, and Cx43
(Oligo 4.0 software) were summarized in Table
1. Pairs of primers contained an intronic
sequence to discriminate cDNA amplification product versus genomic DNA
amplification product. Note that for D H and Cx36, the presence of an
intronic sequence was inferred from the human and mouse sequences
because rat cDNAs were not available.
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Table 1.
Primer sequences used for the specific amplification of
dopamine -hydroxylase, connexin 43, and connexin 36 in single cells
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Real-time amperometric measurements of catecholamine
release. Nicotine-driven catecholamine exocytosis from chromaffin
cells was monitored by the electrochemical detection of secretory
events (Chow et al., 1992 ). To perform single cell studies, carbon
fibers with a 10 µm diameter tip and 50 µm length (WPI, Herts, UK)
were chosen as previously reported (Barbara et al., 1998 ). The tip of
the electrode was gently pressed against the cell surface. Amperometric
currents were measured at a constant voltage of 800 mV with an EPC-9
patch-clamp amplifier and were analyzed and filtered using Igor Pro + Igor Filter Design Laboratory (Kaiser low-pass filter) software.
Test substances. To mimic a focal and brief stimulation,
nicotine (nicotine chloride, 200 mM) was
iontophoretically applied onto the cell of interest using a sharp
microelectrode (100 M if filled with acetate buffer), the tip of
which was positioned near the cell. The concentration reported is that
in the microelectrode. Nicotine was prepared from a stock solution in
an acetate buffer (pH 4). At this pH value, nicotine was negatively
charged and, consequently, could be delivered from the microelectrode
after application of outward current pulses (50 nA intensity, 1 msec duration). Tetrodotoxin-cadmium-containing solution was
pressure-ejected from an extracellular micropipette positioned in the
vicinity of recorded cells. Nicotine, cadmium chloride, tetrodotoxin
(TTX), Lucifer yellow (LY), and the gap junction blocker carbenoxolone were purchased from Sigma (St. Louis, MO).
Statistics. Numerical data are expressed as the mean ± SEM. Student's t test (paired or unpaired) was used to
compare means. Percentages were compared using a contingency table and
the 2 test. Differences with
p < 0.001 were considered significant.
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RESULTS |
Propagation of action potential-induced
[Ca2+]i transients between neighboring chromaffin
cells
Intercellular Ca2+ rises triggered by
action potentials in a given chromaffin cell were imaged while
simultaneously monitoring associated
[Ca2+]i changes in neighboring cells. As
illustrated in Figure
1A, a 50 msec duration
depolarizing current evoking a doublet of action potentials induced a
simultaneous [Ca2+]i rise in the
stimulated cell (cell 1) and in an adjacent cell (cell 2). The
[Ca2+]i of other neighboring cells in
the same optical plane remained at basal levels. The kinetics of both
action potential-induced and propagated
[Ca2+]i transients were not
significantly different (time-to-peak: 160 ± 20 msec,
n = 12 versus 150 ± 20 msec, n = 12, p > 0.001). However, the amplitude of the
Ca2+ response in the unstepped cell was
usually smaller than in the stimulated cell. The delay between the
onset of both Ca2+ signals was very short
(39.8 ± 9.4 msec; n = 12), leading to a speed of
propagation of ~500 µm/sec (based on a 20 µm distance between
cell centers and the acquisition sample time). To determine whether the
extent of propagation (one cell in the example shown in Fig. 1)
depended on the amplitude of the [Ca2+]i
rise in the stimulated cell, the depolarizing step duration was
increased to 500 msec (Fig. 1B). A burst of 13 action
potentials induced a larger [Ca2+]i
increase but did not modify the number of responsive cells (n = 9 cell fields). Such a simultaneous
[Ca2+]i increase between adjacent
chromaffin cells (up to three cells in the same optical plane) on
depolarization-evoked action potentials was observed in 39.5% of
recorded cell fields (n = 15 of 38).

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Figure 1.
Propagation of action potential-induced
[Ca2+]i transients between chromaffin cells
in situ. Electrical activity-driven multicellular
[Ca2+]i increases were imaged by real-time
scanning laser confocal imaging (120 images/sec with averaging 4 frames) in five chromaffin cells loaded with Oregon Green 488 BAPTA-1
as the Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent probe.
Fluorescence emission changes were normalized to baseline fluorescence
F/Fmin. The stimulated cell
is indicated by an asterisk. Each image corresponds to
10 averaged confocal images before (a), during
(b), and after (c)
depolarization. Action potentials were triggered by injecting
depolarizing current into cell 1 (Vm = 75 mV). A brief depolarization (50 msec) inducing a doublet of action
potentials (A) or a sustained depolarization (500 msec) evoking a burst of 13 action potentials (B)
leads to a simultaneous transient [Ca2+]i increase
in both the stimulated and a neighboring cell (cell 2).
Note that cell 5 (B) spontaneously displayed a
[Ca2+]i change during the recording that was not
linked to the action potentials evoked in cell 1.
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We then investigated whether simultaneous
[Ca2+]i rises also occurred
spontaneously between adjacent cells. As shown by time-lapse optical
sequences of Oregon Green 488 BAPTA-1-loaded cells, ~16% of
chromaffin cells displaying spontaneous
[Ca2+]i transients fired in synchrony
with at least one neighboring cell (Fig.
2A) (n = 195 cells from four different experiments). These spontaneously
co-active chromaffin cells co-existed with asynchronous cells. Within a
cluster, the synchronized cells were spatially confined (up to four
cells in the same confocal plane). [Ca2+]i transients of co-active cells
displayed similar kinetics (time-to-peak: 290 ± 65 msec vs
290 ± 61 msec for cell 1 and cell 2; n = 10 cell pairs; p > 0.001; paired t test). When
[Ca2+]i transients were imaged for
longer periods (>10 min), sequences of spontaneous
synchronization-desynchronization were observed (data not shown).

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Figure 2.
Synchronized spontaneous
[Ca2+]i transients between chromaffin cells.
A, Spontaneous [Ca2+]i changes were
imaged in five chromaffin cells. Plots of relative Oregon Green 488 BAPTA-1 emission changes showing synchronized
[Ca2+]i transients in three of five cells. Note
that the two other cells remained silent. B, Reversible
blocking effect of a 30 sec TTX (0.5 µM) + Cd2+ (0.5 mM) ejection on spontaneous
[Ca2+]i transients. Insets,
Detailed kinetics of two [Ca2+]i transients before
and after application of blockers.
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Synchronous and asynchronous [Ca2+]i
transients probably resulted from spontaneous action potentials,
because they were reversibly abolished in the presence of TTX (0.5 µM) + Cd2+ (0.5 mM), blockers of voltage-activated
Na+ and Ca2+
channels, respectively (Fig. 2B) (n = 22 of 29), TTX alone, or Cd2+ alone
(n = 11 of 20 and 31 of 37, respectively, data not shown).
Taken together, these results indicate that in situ, either
spontaneous or electrically evoked action potential-linked
[Ca2+]i transients are not confined to
the initially stimulated cells, but are transmitted to other chromaffin
cells, indicating information transfer between adjoining cells.
Evidence for a gap junction-mediated electrical coupling
What are the mechanisms involved in the simultaneous
[Ca2+]i rises occurring in neighboring
chromaffin cells? Two cell-to-cell communication pathways (gap
junctions or local release of compounds acting on neighboring cells)
could explain this propagation. Two observations, (1) the rapid speed
of propagation between two cells (500 µm/sec) and (2) the similar
kinetics of both action potential-induced and propagated
[Ca2+]i transients (Fig. 1), suggesting
that action potentials are conducted to adjacent cells, support the
hypothesis of junctional communication. To further confirm gap
junctional coupling between chromaffin cells, the membrane potential of
cell pairs was recorded in the whole-cell configuration with the dual
patch-clamp technique (Fig. 3). The
passive biophysical membrane properties of chromaffin cells in slices
were: (1) resting membrane potential ( 68 ± 1 mV;
n = 172), input resistance (0.82 ± 0.04 G ;
range, 0.13-3 G ; n = 172), and capacitance
(11.64 ± 0.40 pF; n = 28). These results are in
agreement with those reported by other groups (Barbara and Takeda,
1996 ; Kajiwara et al., 1997 ; Barbara et al., 1998 ). The fact that many
chromaffin cells had a low membrane input resistance ( 500 M in
32% of cells) was consistent with the idea that chromaffin cells could
be coupled. In 40% of cell pairs (n = 68), the voltage changes in response to hyperpolarizing-depolarizing current injected in the stimulated cell were reflected in the unstepped cell (Fig. 3A,B) and vice versa (data not shown). However, among the
cell pairs, the response transmitted to the unstepped cell displayed variable amplitudes. In 75% of coupled pairs, the action potential was
distorted, leading only to small depolarizations (Fig. 3A), whereas in the remaining pairs, the action potential was transmitted (Fig. 3B). Consequently, the coupling ratio exhibited a wide
distribution range from 0.03 to 0.95 (mean 0.34 ± 0.10;
n = 14 coupled pairs) (Fig. 3C). It is
interesting to note that the coupling ratio value for a given cell pair
remained constant independent of the amplitude or polarity of the
current step. In accordance with gap junction-driven electrical
coupling, junctional currents were recorded in 61% (8 of 13) of
Cs+-loaded chromaffin cell pairs. Cell
pairs were voltage clamped at 80 mV, and voltage steps were delivered
from this potential with command pulses of both polarities to cell 1. The resulting junctional currents (Ij) recorded in the
unstepped cell appeared to remain constant for the duration of the step
(Fig. 3D, inset). The amplitude of Ij was then
plotted as a function of the transjunctional potential (Fig.
3D). The I-V curve displayed a linear
relationship within the transjunctional membrane potential range of
80 to +100 mV. The curve used to fit the data were derived from a
linear regression, given a macroscopic conductance of ~3 nS.

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Figure 3.
Electrical coupling between chromaffin cell pairs.
Membrane potential and macroscopic ionic currents were monitored in
chromaffin cell pairs using the dual patch-clamp technique.
A, Illustration of a cell pair in which the triggering
of action potentials in the stimulated cell resulted in small membrane
depolarizations in the unstepped cell. The two cells were
current-clamped at 80 mV. Note that cell 2 was itself able to
generate depolarization-evoked action potentials. B,
Example of a cell pair in which action potentials were transmitted to
the nonstimulated cell. The two cells were current-clamped at 80 mV.
C, Histogram illustrating the wide distribution range of
the coupling ratio calculated in 30 chromaffin cell pairs from
current-clamp measurements of voltage amplitude (in response to a
hyperpolarizing current injection) in both cell 1 (stepped cell) and
cell 2 (target cell) (from 0 for noncoupled pairs to 1 for highly
coupled pairs). The number of recorded cells is indicated in
parentheses. D, Inset,
Chart recordings of junctional currents (Ij) in a
Cs+-loaded (140 mM
Cs+-gluconate) cell pair voltage clamped at 80 mV
(voltage steps from 160 to +20 mV, 100 msec duration).
Bottom, I-V relationship in which the
junctional current amplitude (Ij) was plotted as a
function of the transjunctional voltage (Vj) from 80
to +100 mV. The curves used to fit the data were derived from the
linear regression y = 2.98× 0.61 (dotted
line). The correlation coefficient
r2 was 0.98. Three to six cell pairs
were used to determine the I-V curve at each
transjunctional potential.
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Further support for the presence of functional gap junctions in
chromaffin cells was obtained in experiments to detect mRNA encoding
connexins in randomly chosen cells. We focused on two connexins, Cx43
described in numerous endocrine-neuroendocrine tissues (Meda et al.,
1993 ) and Cx36, a recently cloned connexin preferentially expressed in
cell types of neural origin (Condorelli et al., 1998 ) such as
chromaffin cells. All samples were first assessed for the expression of
dopamine -hydroxylase to confirm that harvested cells were indeed
chromaffin cells. Because of the low expression level of mRNA encoding
Cxs in single cells, the nested PCR procedure was required. The
detection of Cx43 mRNA in 50% of harvested cortical cells was used as
a control (n = 10), because rat cortical cells in the
zona fasciculata and the zona reticularis are highly coupled by
Cx43-containing gap junctions (Murray et al., 1995 ). Under the same
experimental conditions, 20.6% and 25% of D H-positive cells
expressed at least Cx43 or Cx36 mRNA, respectively (n = 34 and 16). In some chromaffin cells (3 of 16), both Cx36 and Cx43
transcripts were found (Fig. 4). Although
PCR experiments were done on different chromaffin cells than those from
which we recorded, this result suggests that Cx36 and/or Cx43 may
functionally and dynamically connect chromaffin cells in
situ.

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Figure 4.
Expression of Cx36 and Cx43 mRNA in a single
chromaffin cell. The harvested cell was identified as chromaffin cell
by the presence of the D H transcript (438 bp). Gel electrophoresis
of RT-PCR products of the D H-positive cell in which Cx36 mRNA
(predicted size of 360 bp) and Cx43 mRNA (425 bp) were co-detected.
MW, Size marker.
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To further confirm the presence of functional gap junctions, chromaffin
cells were impaled with a microelectrode filled with LY, a fluorescent
tracer able to pass through gap junctions. LY diffusion was observed
only between cells exhibiting synchronous [Ca2+]i transients (Fig.
5A) (n = 4 cell fields). LY never diffused between nonsynchronized cells
(n = 8 cell fields, data not shown). When LY was
randomly injected into cells that were not
Ca2+ imaged, the tracer diffused from the
impaled cell to neighboring cells (up to 3) in 32.8% of the clusters
impaled (n = 64). This percentage was not significantly
different to that found for electrically coupled cells (40%, see Fig.
3) and cells in which action potentials triggered simultaneous
[Ca2+]i transients (39.5%) (Fig. 1)
(p > 0.001). To assess the involvement of
functional gap junctions in intercellular coupling, the fluorescent tracer was then injected in chromaffin cells chosen at random in the
presence of bath-applied carbenoxolone (100 µM), a decoupling agent (Ishimatsu and
Williams, 1996 ). Under these experimental conditions, the probability
of observing an intercellular coupling (seen by LY diffusion)
significantly decreased (0.06 versus 0.31 in control conditions;
n = 46; p < 0.001) (Fig.
5B).

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Figure 5.
Lucifer yellow diffusion between spontaneously
synchronized chromaffin cells and blockade by carbenoxolone.
A, Optical measurements of two neighboring cells
displaying synchronized spontaneous [Ca2+]i
transients. After fluorimetric recording, cell 1 was patched with LY (1 mM in the intrapipette solution). A few seconds later, LY
diffused into cell 2. B, Pooled data summarizing the
probability of observing an intercellular coupling (seen by LY
diffusion) between chromaffin cells injected at random in the presence
or absence of the uncoupling agent carbenoxolone (100 µM,
bath-application, 10-30 min). Control and treated slices came from the
same adrenal glands and results are representative of three different
experiments.
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Involvement of gap junction-mediated coupling after
nicotinic stimulation
Does the gap junction-driven response occur under physiological
cholinergic stimulation? To mimic the in vivo release of
transmitters into the synaptic cleft, the cholinergic secretagogue
nicotine was iontophoretically applied onto a single chromaffin cell
via a sharp microelectrode, leading to focal stimulation of a single cell. Subsequent multicellular [Ca2+]i
changes were simultaneously imaged with real-time confocal microscopy.
A 1 msec nicotinic application induced a transient [Ca2+]i rise in the stimulated cell as
expected, but more interestingly, [Ca2+]i simultaneously increased in
several adjacent cells (Fig.
6A, left traces).
Current polarity inversion (n = 10) or application of
nicotine-free saline (n = 8) never induced
[Ca2+]i changes in either stimulated or
adjacent cells. Extracellular diffusion of nicotine could reasonably be
ruled out because (1) a [Ca2+]i increase
was not observed in all cells belonging to the same cluster, whereas
all these cells were sensitive to pressure ejection of nicotine, (2) in
some experiments, only the stimulated cell exhibited a
[Ca2+]i rise, (3) the iontophoretic flux
of nicotine was oriented in the opposite direction of the perfusion
stream, and (4) saline was continuously ejected in the vicinity of the
recorded cell field through a blunt macropipette, thus reinforcing the
perfusion stream. The propagated signal between chromaffin cells
reliably persisted after repetitive applications of nicotine,
indicating that the intercellular mechanism underlying the propagation
did not desensitize during the recording time (data not shown).

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Figure 6.
Blocking effect of carbenoxolone on
nicotine-induced simultaneous [Ca2+]i increases
within a chromaffin cell cluster. Nicotine (200 mM, 1 msec)
was iontophoretically applied on cell 1 through a sharp microelectrode
(the onset of the nicotinic stimulation is shown by an
arrow). The [Ca2+]i increase
originating in the stimulated cell was simultaneously detected in two
adjacent cells. The [Ca2+]i rises in the
nonstimulated cells (cell 2 and cell 3)
were reversibly abolished in the presence of the gap junction blocker
carbenoxolone (100 µM, 15 min bath application).
B, Pooled data. The number of cell clusters recorded is
indicated in parentheses. *p < 0.001, as compared with control values.
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The functional implication of gap junctions in nicotine-induced signal
propagation was further demonstrated by the blocking effect of
carbenoxolone. Bath-application of carbenoxolone (100 µM,
15 min before nicotine iontophoresis) specifically suppressed the
[Ca2+]i rises in coupled cells, without
dramatically altering the Ca2+ response in
the stimulated cell (Fig. 6A, middle and right
traces). In separate experiments, we checked that carbenoxolone,
per se, did not alter (1) the percentage of spontaneously active cells (44.3 ± 5.2% vs 44.6 ± 5.5% before and during
carbenoxolone application, respectively; n = 17 cell
clusters; p > 0.001; paired t test) and (2)
the amplitude (0.49 ± 0.03 F/Fmin vs 0.51 ± 0.03; p > 0.001; n = 41) and the
duration (29.4 ± 1.4 sec vs 26.1 ± 1.3; p > 0.001; n = 41) of the nicotine-activated
Ca2+ response. The effect of carbenoxolone
was only partly (~50% recovery) reversible after a 10-20 min
washout (Fig. 6B).
Catecholamine secretion triggered after electrical and nicotinic
stimulation in gap junction-coupled cells
Because an increase in [Ca2+]i is a
prerequisite for exocytosis in chromaffin cells, we investigated the
physiological relevance of action potential- and nicotine-triggered
Ca2+ increases in coupled cells. To
address this question, catecholamine exocytosis was monitored using the
amperometric constant-voltage method (+800 mV) in cells neighboring the
stimulated one. In 12.5% of cell clusters, a burst of action
potentials induced catecholamine release from the stimulated cell as
previously reported (Moser and Neher, 1997 ) and, more interestingly,
also from nonstepped neighboring cells (perforated patch-clamp;
n = 16) (Fig. 7). This percentage is similar to that found for highly coupled cell pairs (10%) (Fig. 3), in which unattenuated propagation of action potentials occurred.

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Figure 7.
Action potential-induced catecholamine release in
coupled chromaffin cells. A burst of action potentials (1 sec
depolarization, perforated patch-clamp) was triggered in a chromaffin
cell. Subsequent catecholamine exocytosis was simultaneously monitored
by the amperometry technique at a constant voltage (+800 mV) in
the stepped cell (A, cell 1*) and, during
a second trial, in an adjacent cell (B, cell
2). As shown by the outwardly directed current
deflections, action potentials were effective in stimulating
catecholamine release in both the stepped cell and the neighboring
cell.
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Similarly, an iontophoretic application of nicotine (1 msec) triggered
spike-like secretory events in nonstimulated cells in which
[Ca2+]i previously was shown to increase
(Fig. 8, cell 2)
(n = 8 of 11). The delay between nicotinic stimulation
and the first secretory event was 1.04 ± 0.36 sec
(n = 8; range, 0.02-3.1 sec). Catecholamine exocytosis
was never detected in noncoupled cells (Fig. 8, cell 3).
This result is in agreement with our data showing a that
nicotine-driven Ca2+ signal was not
observed in all the cells neighboring the stimulated cell (data not
shown). Taken together, these results suggest that gap junction
signaling activated by nicotine represents a functional mechanism
leading to catecholamine secretion.

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Figure 8.
Nicotinic stimulation triggers catecholamine
exocytosis in coupled chromaffin cells. The iontophoretic application
of nicotine (1 msec; indicated by an arrow) on cell 1*
evoked a simultaneous [Ca2+]i rise in cell 2 but
was without effect on cell 3. Catecholamine exocytosis was sequentially
followed by the amperometric detection of secretory events (constant
voltage of +800 mV) in cell 2 and then cell 3, respectively. As shown
by outward currents, nicotine triggered catecholamine release in cell 2 only. Insets, Nicotine-induced
[Ca2+]i rises imaged in cell 1 during amperometric
recordings of cells 2 and 3.
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DISCUSSION |
Based on anatomical data (Carmichael, 1986 ; Tomlinson and
Coupland, 1990 ), the currently proposed concept for chromaffin cell secretion considers each cell as an independent functional unit releasing catecholamines after activation of its synaptic inputs (Iijima et al., 1992 ). Nevertheless, we describe here an additional mechanism involving gap junction-mediated coupling between chromaffin cells in rat adrenal slices. This cell-to-cell communication pathway underlies the propagation of electrical signal leading to simultaneous multicellular [Ca2+]i increases, thereby
triggering catecholamine exocytosis.
Fast activation of simultaneous [Ca2+]i
increases in adjoining chromaffin cells: the hallmark of electrotonic
coupling via gap junctions
We show for the first time that the triggering of action
potentials or the nicotinic stimulation of a single chromaffin cell results in simultaneous [Ca2+]i
increases in adjoining cells caused by the propagation of a depolarizing voltage wave. As a general rule, excitable cells use
distinct but not mutually exclusive pathways to communicate among
themselves, i.e., synaptic transmission, gap junctions, and paracrine
secretion. Based on our experimental results, gap junctions are likely
to represent the anatomical correlate of the functional coupling
observed here. At least four observations support this proposal: (1)
bidirectional propagation of membrane depolarization between two cells,
(2) junctional current recorded in cell pairs, (3) diffusion of LY
between simultaneously active cells, and (4) reduction of signal
propagation by the uncoupling agent carbenoxolone after nicotinic
stimulation. Nevertheless, chromaffin cell granules are known to
contain various compounds co-stored and co-released with
catecholamines, such as ATP (Rojas et al., 1985 ), that could act
locally on neighboring cells. Because of the slow velocity of ATP
diffusion in the extracellular space (~40 µm/sec; Guthrie et al.,
1999 ), paracrine secretion of ATP is unlikely to be involved in the
concomitant [Ca2+]i rises that we
observed between chromaffin cells (speed of propagation of ~500
µm/sec). A gap junction-mediated pathway usually ensures both
electrotonic and metabolic communication between coupled cells, each of
which is associated with distinct speeds of propagation. Although we
cannot definitively rule out metabolic coupling (i.e., simple diffusion
of second messengers), the speed of the propagation wave between
coupled cells (~500 µm/sec) strongly suggests the involvement of
electrotonic coupling. In this way, the depolarization wave occurring
either spontaneously or after stimulation rapidly propagates into the
clusters of coupled chromaffin cells.
Functional electrical coupling mediated by gap junctions between rat
chromaffin cells has not been demonstrated previously. Based on
electrophysiological properties, the idea that chromaffin cells may be
electrically coupled in situ has been hypothesized for
various species, including rats (Ishikawa and Kanno, 1978 ), mouse
(Nassar-Gentina et al., 1988 ; Moser, 1998 ) and guinea pigs (Holman et
al., 1994 ). In addition, the presence of gap junctions has been
reported in the rat adrenal medulla (Meda et al., 1993 ). Strengthening
these findings, our dual patch-clamp recordings clearly show that gap
junctions between chromaffin cells are functional and underlie the
bidirectional transfer of voltage changes between coupled cells. In
most cases, the amplitude of the voltage response induced in the
unstepped cell was not sufficient to trigger action potentials,
indicating weak coupling, as reported in mouse adrenal slices (Moser,
1998 ). In the remaining cell pairs, coupling strength was high enough
to transmit action potentials. The distortion of the transmitted
voltage signal compared with the original signal indicates significant
low-pass filtering of the voltage response, as described in neurons
(Venance et al., 2000 ). Several proposals can explain such filtering:
(1) the presence of a few open gap junctions at the cell surface
(Moser, 1998 ), (2) the expression of distinct connexin types with
different unitary conductances, and (3) the expression of connexins
with a low voltage sensitivity.
Our data on the connexins involved in the junctional communication
between chromaffin cells are in agreement with previous reports showing
that Cx43- or Cx36-containing gap junctions are expressed between
neuroendocrine-endocrine cells (Meda et al., 1993 ; Munari-Silem and
Rousset, 1996 ; Belluardo et al., 2000 ; Serre-Beinier et al., 2000 ). Two
of our results indicate that Cx36 and Cx43 are present in chromaffin
cells. First, the messengers encoding these two connexins were detected
in single chromaffin cells. Second, experiments showing LY diffusion
are in agreement with the possible involvement of Cx36 and/or Cx43,
because both are dye-permeable (Veenstra, 1996 ; Srinivas et al., 1999 ).
Assuming a unitary conductance of 61 and 10 pS for Cx43 and Cx36,
respectively (Valiunas et al., 1997 ; Srinivas et al., 1999 ), the
estimation of the junctional conductance in a rat chromaffin cell pair
(3 nS maximum) would correspond to ~50 and 300 open Cx43- and
Cx36-built channels, adequate numbers to support significant voltage
propagation when compared with only 7-10 open channels present between
mouse chromaffin cells, leading to a junctional conductance that is too
low to support spreading of electrical activity (Moser,
1998 ).
As shown by our results, ~50% (depending on the technique used) of
chromaffin cells in situ are functionally coupled via gap junctions to at least one apposing cell located in the same optical plane. To better assess the extent of coupling, a three-dimensional approach would be necessary. On the other hand, the dynamic aspects of
coupling (occurrence of spontaneous coupling-decoupling) requiring long-lasting recordings merits further investigation. Nevertheless, in
our view, intercellular signaling mediated through gap junctions most
likely contributes to the mechanisms of communication within the
adrenal medulla. The electrotonic coupling that we describe represents
only one aspect of the role for gap junctions between chromaffin cells.
As gap junctions are permeable to numerous low-molecular weight
compounds, they are likely to subserve metabolic coupling, thereby
propagating biological messages encoding different cell functions. With
respect to the strength of the coupling, an unresolved issue raised by
our findings is the functional consequences of strong and weak
electrotonic coupling. Although [Ca2+]i
changes were not simultaneously monitored during dual patch-clamp experiments, one could assume that strong and weak coupling are associated with the degree of the
[Ca2+]i rise in the coupled cells. The
propagation of action potentials triggers a
Ca2+ signal that is sufficient to
stimulate catecholamine exocytosis. In weakly coupled cell pairs, the
depolarizations occurring near resting potential might also generate
[Ca2+]i elevations, as reported for
other endocrine cells (Mollard et al., 1994 ) and might control
Ca2+-dependent cell functions other than exocytosis.
Physiological relevance of gap junctions in the adrenal medulla:
complementing synaptic transmission to drive catecholamine
exocytosis?
In endocrine glands in which secretagogues are delivered from the
blood circulation, it is well known that gap junctions (mainly composed
of Cx43) are required to ensure fast synchronized hormone release
(Meda, 1996 ; Munari-Silem and Rousset, 1996 ). Although the synaptic
boutons present on each chromaffin cell (Carmichael, 1986 ) themselves
represent an efficient process to induce fast release of
catecholamines, the gap junction-delineated route is also used for
chromaffin cell exocytosis. The fact that simultaneous [Ca2+]i rises can occur spontaneously
suggests that a spatiotemporal code between gap junction-coupled cells
(Guérineau et al., 1998 ) coordinates basal exocytosis at the cell
cluster level. During neurotransmission, the involvement of gap
junctions in nicotine-induced multicellular
[Ca2+]i rises and subsequent exocytosis
suggests that in vivo direct chromaffin cell-to-cell
interactions would be an important determinant in the regulation of
secretory cell activity by acetylcholine. Although we show that gap
junctions mainly ensure electrotonic coupling leading to exocytosis, we
cannot rule out a role in other cell functions such as metabolic
coupling, which would allow for the diffusion of chemical messengers
(Ins(1,4,5)P3, ATP... ) between chromaffin cells.
Our study also raises the interesting issue that chromaffin cells are
under the dual control of the splanchnic nerve (hitherto described as
the major regulator of secretion) and of adjacent cells. We propose
that within these anatomically well described cell complexes (Hillarp,
1946 ), both mechanisms might occur to activate catecholamine release
depending on the catecholamine needs and/or the activation state of the
synaptic pathway. Under basal conditions corresponding to low-frequency
discharge of the splanchnic nerve, few synaptic boutons are stimulated
and the propagation of the secretory events between gap
junction-coupled cells may be sufficient to release catecholamines. In
contrast, during stressful situations, the massive catecholamine
secretion suddenly required might be mediated mostly by the synaptic
pathway activated by sustained discharges of the splanchnic nerve, as reported earlier (Kajiwara et al., 1997 ). In particular
physiological-pathological conditions, the functional state of
synaptic transmission (presence of nonfunctional synapses as immature
synapses, silent synapses... ) may also represent an intrinsic
determinant requiring gap junctions, as an efficient aid to synapses
leading chromaffin cells to exocytose catecholamines. In addition to
this direct secretory role, the propagation of electrical activity and
associated Ca2+ rises after activation of
cholinergic nicotinic receptors might also stimulate other
Ca2+-dependent cell activities (such as
secretory vesicle trafficking, gene expression... ) to sensitize
chromaffin cells to exocytosis after subsequent synaptic activation.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 5, 2001; revised April 26, 2001; accepted May 8, 2001.
This work was supported by grants from Institut National de la
Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Région
Languedoc-Roussillon, Association pour la Recherche sur le Cancer, and
Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale. We are indebted to Drs. O. Manzoni, P. Chavis, P. Mollard, and U. Gerber for critical reading and
M. Passama and A. Carrette for their excellent technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Nathalie C. Guérineau,
INSERM U469, CCIPE, 141 rue de la Cardonille, 34094 Montpellier CEDEX
5, France. E-mail: guerinea{at}u469.montp.inserm.fr.
 |
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