The Journal of Neuroscience, June 1, 2003, 23(11):4549-4559
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Connexin 47 (Cx47)-Deficient Mice with Enhanced Green Fluorescent Protein Reporter Gene Reveal Predominant Oligodendrocytic Expression of Cx47 and Display Vacuolized Myelin in the CNS
Benjamin Odermatt,1
Kerstin Wellershaus,1
Anke Wallraff,3
Gerald Seifert,3
Joachim Degen,1
Carsten Euwens,1
Babette Fuss,4
Heinrich Büssow,2
Karl Schilling,2
Christian Steinhäuser,3 and
Klaus Willecke1
1 Institut für Genetik, Universität Bonn, D-53117 Bonn, Germany,
2 Anatomisches Institut, Universität Bonn, D-53115 Bonn, Germany,
3 Experimentelle Neurobiologie, Neurochirurgie, Universität Bonn, D-53105
Bonn, Germany, and
4 Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Virginia Commonwealth University,
Richmond, Virginia 23298
 |
Abstract
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To further characterize the recently described gap junction gene connexin
47 (Cx47), we generated Cx47-null mice by replacing the Cx47 coding DNA with
an enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) reporter gene, which was thus
placed under control of the endogenous Cx47 promoter. Homozygous mutant mice
were fertile and showed no obvious morphological or behavioral abnormalities.
Colocalization of EGFP fluorescence and immunofluorescence of cell marker
proteins revealed that Cx47 was mainly expressed in oligodendrocytes in highly
myelinated CNS tissues and in few calcium-binding protein S100
subunit-positive cells but not in neurons or peripheral sciatic nerve. This
corrects our previous conclusion that Cx47 mRNA is expressed in brain and
spinal cord neurons (Teubner et al.,
2001
). Cx47 protein was detected by Western blot analysis after
immunoprecipitation in CNS tissues of wild-type mice but not in heart or
Cx47-deficient tissues. Electron microscopic analysis of CNS white matter in
Cx47-deficient mice revealed a conspicuous vacuolation of nerve fibers,
particularly at the site of the optic nerve where axons are first contacted by
oligodendrocytes and myelination starts. Initial analyses of
Cx32/Cx47-double-deficient mice showed that these mice developed an action
tremor and died on average at 51 d after birth. The central white matter of
these double-deficient mice exhibited much more abundant vacuolation in nerve
fibers than mice deficient only in Cx47.
Key words: EGFP; gap junctions; oligodendrocytes; glia cells; vacuolation; Cx32/Cx47 double-deficient mice
 |
Introduction
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Connexins are protein subunits of hexameric hemichannels (connexons) in the
plasma membrane of vertebrate cells. Hemichannels in contacting cells can dock
to each other, thus forming intercellular conduits or gap junction channels,
which provide electrotonic and metabolic communication. Twenty human and 19
mouse connexin genes have been identified
(White and Paul, 1999
;
Eiberger et al., 2001
;
Willecke et al., 2002
).
Increasing morphological and physiological evidence indicates that gap
junctional intercellular communication in the mammalian CNS is a common
phenomenon (Rash et al.,
2001a
; Traub et al.,
2002
). Recently we reported the cloning and initial
characterization of the mouse connexin 47 gene (Cx47)
(Teubner et al., 2001
), whose
mRNA, based on in situ hybridization analysis, was localized to CNS
neurons. This conclusion, however, has recently been challenged by Menichella
et al. (2001
), who reported in
an abstract that Cx47 mRNA is expressed by oligodendrocytes.
Disruption of connexin genes has led to novel insights into the biological
function of gap junctions (Simon and
Goodenough, 1998
; Lo,
1999
; Willecke et al.,
2002
). Here we describe the generation of Cx47-deficient mice in
which the Cx47 coding region was replaced by cDNA coding for the enhanced
variant of the green fluorescent protein (EGFP)
(Chalfie et al., 1994
;
Cubitt et al., 1995
), which,
consequently, was placed under control of the Cx47 promoter (for nomenclature
of mouse genotype, see Materials and Methods). In these animals, EGFP
fluorescence should allow unequivocal identification of specific cell types
expressing Cx47 mRNA. Moreover, it should ease recognition and patch-clamp
recording of Cx47-expressing cells in acute tissue slices.
We find that Cx47-deficient mice are fertile and show no obvious gross
anatomical or behavioral abnormalities. A combined immunocytochemical,
physiological, and ultrastructural analysis of these animals revealed that
Cx47 is expressed in oligodendrocytes and some calcium-binding protein S100
subunit (S100
)-positive cells, i.e., presumed astrocytes. Thus,
they did not confirm our previous conclusion
(Teubner et al., 2001
) that
Cx47 mRNA is expressed in neurons. Presumably, our probe used for in
situ hybridization cross-reacted with an unknown transcript in neurons.
Electron microscopic investigation of the optic nerve and other CNS tissues in
Cx47EGFP(-/-) mice
revealed abnormal myelin vacuolation of nerve fibers.
To corroborate the significance of Cx47 for myelination
(Scherer and Chance, 1995
) and
oligodendrocyte function, we also analyzed mice deficient for both Cx47 and
Cx32. This latter connexin is known to be expressed in oligodendrocytes
(Li et al., 1997
;
Scherer et al., 1998
).
Cx32/Cx47-double-deficient mice died on average after 51 d and displayed
delayed myelination and a much stronger vacuolation of CNS nerve fibers than
mice with Cx47 deficiency only. Myelination of peripheral nerves did not seem
to be affected in Cx47- or Cx32/Cx47-deficient mice.
 |
Materials and Methods
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|---|
Construction of the targeting Cx47EGFP vector
The targeting construct consisted of two arms of homologous genomic DNA
flanking the Cx47 coding region: a 5' 2.0 kb
KpnIAciI fragment and a 3' 5.5 kb
EcoRIEcoRV fragment separated by a 1 kb
NcoIAflII EGFP-SV40 poly(A) fragment from pEGFP-1
(Clontech; Palo Alto, CA) with deleted NotI and XbaI sites.
The ATG translational start codon of the EGFP gene was inserted blunt-ended
in-frame after the first seven codons of Cx47. A hypoxanthine
phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) minigene driven by the mouse phosphoglycerate
kinase (PGK) promoter (Magin et al.,
1992
), in the opposite direction from Cx47 and EGFP, was
additionally cloned in front of the 3' homologous flanking region. The
EGFP coding DNA and the HPRT minigene replaced the remaining coding region of
Cx47 and 560 bp of the 3' untranslated region
(Fig. 1a). The final
targeting vector was restriction-mapped, and the Cx47-EGFP transition region
was sequenced. The DNA (250 µg) of the targeting vector was linearized by
NotI digestion and transfected by electroporation into HPRT-deficient
and feeder-independent HPRT Minus (HM-1) embryonic stem (ES) cells (Magin et
al., 1992
,
1998
). Cell culture and
selection of targeted colonies using hypoxanthine-aminopterine-thymidine (HAT)
medium were performed according to standard protocols
(Selfridge et al., 1992
;
Theis et al., 2000
).

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Figure 1. Generation of Cx47-deficient mice with the EGFP reporter gene (Cx47
EGFP). a, Targeting scheme. WT, Wild-type allele; KO,
knock-out allele. The coding region of the wild-type Cx47 gene (black arrow)
is located on one exon and includes 1314 bp. After electrotrans-fecting HM-1
cells with the linearized targeting vector (KO-vektor), homologous
recombination occurred in 10% of all clones as determined by PCR using the
external sense primer (P2) and the EGFP-specific antisense primer (P4). In the
mutated Cx47 allele, the coding region of Cx47 after the first seven codons
was replaced by the EGFP cDNA and the PGK-HPRT minigene (gray arrows). The
translational start codon of EGFP was cloned in-frame with the Cx47 coding
region. The PGK-HPRT minigene was transcribed in the opposite direction. The
backbone of the targeting vector consisted of pBlueskript SK II(+) (pBSK II;
Stratagene). The 5' homologous region (5'hom) spanned 2 kb; the
3' homologous region (3'hom) included 5.5 kb. b, Southern
blot analysis was performed to confirm homologous recombination.
KpnI-digested mouse kidney DNA was probed with a 1 kb external
EcoRVKpnI fragment (probe). The 7.0 kb band was
derived from the wild-type allele; the larger 12.2 kb band resulted from the
knock-out allele. c, Diagnostic PCR of tail-tip DNA was performed to
screen pedigree mice for occurrence of wild-type and knock-out Cx47
EGFP alleles. A multiplex PCR was established using a Cx47
intron-specific sense primer (P1) and a Cx47 exon-specific antisense primer
(P3), producing a 530 bp wild-type amplicon and an EGFP-specific antisense
primer (P4), resulting in a 340 bp amplicon of the knock-out allele.
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Screening of ES cell clones
Homologous recombination in HAT-resistant ES cell clones was screened using
PCR and subsequently confirmed by Southern blot hybridization.
Hot start PCR screening for homologous recombined cell clones was performed
using a 5' sense primer (P2; 5'-CTGAGAGTGGACA-GGTCCCTTTGAAGG)
external to the targeting vector and a 3' EGFP-specific antisense primer
(P4; 5'-GACACGCTGAACTTGTGGCCG-TTTACG) under the following conditions: 15
min of DNA denaturation at 96°C, addition of Taq DNA polymerase
(Promega, Madison, WI), followed by 94°C for 45 sec and 72°C for 2 min
15 sec (annealing and extension were done at the same temperature) for 38
cycles. Final elongation was done at 72°C for 10 min. PCR was performed
using a PTC200 thermocycler (MJ Research, Waltham, MA). The resulting
diagnostic amplicon had an estimated size of 2.0 kb (results not shown).
For Southern blot hybridization, DNA of PCR-positive ES cell clones was
digested by KpnI and electrophorezed in a 0.7% agarose gel. After
blotting of DNA onto Hybond N+ membranes (Amersham Biosciences,
Buckinghamshire, UK), the digested DNA was fixed by UV cross-linking. As
hybridization probe, we used a labeled external 1 kb
EcoRVKpnI fragment
(Fig. 1a) and a
labeled internal 330 bp HPRT-specific HindIIIXhoI
fragment (Güldenagel et al.,
2001
). Hybridization was performed using Quick Hyb hybridization
solution (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) according to instructions provided by the
manufacturer. Final washing was performed under stringent conditions (last
wash at 55°C for 15 min in 0.2x SSC and 0.1% SDS). The diagnostic
wild type DNA fragment using the external probe had an estimated size of 7.0
kb. Southern blot hybridization using either the external or the internal
probe showed a DNA fragment of 12.2 kb containing the targeted Cx47
allele.
Karyotypic analyses, PCR, and Southern hybridization were performed, and
positive ES cell clones showing the closest morphological similarity to the
original ES cells (Theis et al.,
2000
) were used for blastocyst injections.
Generation of Cx47EGFP mice
Successfully targeted ES cell clones with an 85100% diploid
karyotype were injected into C57BL/6 blastocysts as described
(Theis et al., 2000
). After
uterus transfer of blastocysts, coat color chimeric mice were born and later
crossed with C57BL/6 partners. Offspring mice were checked for germ line
transmission by PCR of tail-tip DNA using a Cx47 intron-specific sense primer
(P1; 5'-CAGGATCAATGGAAGATTC-TCGGTCCC), which was combined with Cx47
exon-specific (P3; 5'-GCCAAGCGGTGGACTGCATAGCCCAGG) and EGFP-specific
(P4) antisense primers in a multiplex PCR approach under the following
conditions: 5 min of DNA denaturation at 95°C, followed by 40 cycles of
94°C for 45 sec, 64°C for 45 sec, and 72°C for 1 min, and final
elongation at 72°C for 10 min. The PCR yielded a 530 bp amplicon specific
for wild type and a 340 bp fragment for the mutated Cx47 allele
(Fig. 1c).
Additionally, Southern blot hybridization as described above was used to
confirm homologous recombination of the targeting vector
(Fig. 1b).
Mice heterozygous (+/-) for the Cx47 EGFP allele with 50%
C57BL/6 genetic background were intercrossed to obtain homozygous Cx47
EGFP(-/-) progeny with
two EGFP coding alleles under control of the Cx47 promoter and no Cx47 coding
DNA, heterozygous Cx47
EGFP(+/-) mice with one
Cx47 and one EGFP allele, and wild-type Cx47
(+/+) littermates that
were used for all subsequent studies.
Generation of Cx47/Cx32-double-deficient mice
Cx47 EGFP(-/-) male
mice were intercrossed with Cx32
(-/-) female mice
(Nelles et al., 1996
), and the
F1 generation was intercrossed again to obtain Cx32/Cx47-double-deficient
mice. The Cx32 genotype (the Cx32 gene is located on the X chromosome) was
tested by tail-tip PCR as described before
(Anzini et al., 1997
).
Northern blot analysis
Total RNA from different CNS tissues and heart was prepared from Cx47
EGFP and wild-type adult mice with the TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen,
Karlsruhe, Germany) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The RNA was
separated by electrophoresis in a 1% agarose gel and hybridized under
stringent conditions as described for Southern blot analysis to a labeled 1.6
kb XbaI fragment containing part of the Cx47 coding region and the
3' untranslated region (Teubner et
al., 2001
).
Guinea pig polyclonal antibodies to the C terminus of Cx47
(anti-Cx47)
A 16-amino acid peptide (CKGSTGSRDGKATVWI) corresponding to the very end of
the cytoplasmic loop of mouse Cx47 was synthesized, coupled, and injected into
two Guinea pigs by Eurogentec (Herstal, Belgium). Serum of the final bleeding
after the fourth boost was affinity-purified with the same peptide using a
HiTrap affinity column (Amersham Biosciences). After elution with 3
M KSCN in PBS and dialysis against PBS, the antibodies were
concentrated by Centricon YM-50 centrifugal filter devices (Millipore,
Bedford, MA) and finally stored in PBS with 1% BSA and 0.02% sodium azide.
Cx47 immunoprecipitation and Western blot
Western blot analyses of HeLa wild-type, HeLa-Cx47, HeLa-Cx47-EGFP
(Teubner et al., 2001
), and
HeLa-Cx45 (Butterweck et al.,
1994
) cell lysates with the Cx47 antibodies were prepared.
Cultured HeLa cells were harvested and lysed in Laemmli sample buffer as
described previously (Traub et al.,
1994
). After protein quantification, 100 µg of each protein
lysate was separated by SDS-PAGE on an 11% gel. Proteins were transferred at
100 V for 120 min in transfer buffer (20 mM Tris, 150 mM
glycine, and 20% methanol, pH 8.2) onto Hybond-C extra nitrocellulose
(Amersham Biosciences) and blocked for 1 hr in 1x Roti-Block solution
(Roth, Karlsruhe, Germany). Incubation with Cx47 antibodies was performed at a
1:1000 dilution in 1x Roti-Block at 4°C overnight. After three
washings, the membrane was incubated with 125I-labeled protein A
for 3 hr, washed again three times, and exposed to x-ray film overnight.
For immunoprecipitation, freshly prepared tissues [half of the cerebrum,
whole cerebellum with brainstem, spinal cord (3 cm), and whole heart] from
adult Cx47 EGFP(-/-)
mice and wild-type Cx47
(+/+) littermates were
homogenized in 1 ml of ice-cold radioimmunoprecipitation assay (RIPA) lysis
buffer [10 mM
Na2HPO4/NaH2PO4, pH 7.2, 40
mM NaF, 2 mM EDTA, 0.1% SDS, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1%
sodium desoxycholate, and 1x Complete protease inhibitor mixture (Roche
Molecular Biochemicals, Mannheim, Germany)]. After determination of the
protein concentration, the probes were incubated for 3 hr at 4°C with 80
µl of Sepharose Cl-4B (Amersham Biosciences) in TBS and centrifuged (12,000
x g, 4°C, 30 min). Affinity-purified Cx47 antibodies (6
µl) were incubated with 20 µl of protein A-Sepharose (Amersham
Biosciences) on ice for 2 hr. The precleared lysates were precipitated with
the protein A-Sepharose antibody complex overnight at 4°C and washed three
times with RIPA wash buffer (10 mM
Na2HPO4/NaH2PO4, pH 7.0, 1
M NaCl, 40 mM NaF, 10 mM EDTA, and 0.2%
Triton X-100). The proteins were eluted in 15 µl of Laemmli buffer
(65°C, 5 min) and separated by SDS-PAGE on an 11% gel. After protein
transfer at 100 V for 75 min in transfer buffer (20 mM Tris, 150
mM glycine, and 20% methanol) onto a Hybond ECL nitrocellulose
membrane (Amersham Biosciences), bound proteins were blocked overnight in
1x Roti-Block. To avoid the unwanted detection of the 50 kDa heavy chain
of the antibodies used for precipitation, precipitated and blotted Cx47 was
detected with Cx47 antibodies that had been biotinylated with
NHS-PEO4-biotin
([15-([biotinoyl]amino)-4,7,10,13-tetraoxapentadecanoic acid,
N-hydroxysuccinimidylester; Pierce, Rockford, IL]) according to the
manufacturer's instructions. They were used at a dilution of 1:500 in 1x
Roti-Block for 90 min at room temperature. After three washings (PBS and 0.2%
Tween 20), the membrane was incubated (45 min, room temperature, 1:5000) with
ImmunoPure Streptavidin (horseradish peroxidase-conjugated; Pierce) and washed
again four times. Bound peroxidase was detected using the ECL kit (Amersham
Biosciences).
Cx47 immunofluorescence analysis on HeLa cells
To further characterize the Cx47 antibodies, immunolabeling of cultured
HeLa-Cx47, HeLa-Cx47-EGFP (expressing a Cx47-EGFP fusion protein;
Teubner et al., 2001
), and
HeLa wild-type cells was performed. HeLa cells, grown on glass coverslips as
previously described (Dermietzel et al.,
1984
), were methanol-fixed for 20 min at -20°C and washed with
PBS. To block unspecific binding, the cells were incubated in 4% BSA, 1% goat
serum, 0.1% Triton X-100, and 5% low fat milk powder in PBS for 1 hr at room
temperature. Cells were then incubated with anti-Cx47 diluted 1:500 in PBS
with 4% BSA, 1% goat serum, and 0.1% Triton X-100 at 4°C overnight. After
washing, the immunosignals were visualized using 1:3000 diluted Alexa Fluor
594 conjugated goat anti-guinea pig IgG (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) in PBS
with 4% BSA, 1% goat serum, and 0.1% Triton X-100 and incubated for 2 hr at
room temperature. Nuclei of HeLa wild-type and HeLa-Cx47 cells were stained
with TOTO-1 (Mo-BiTec, Goettingen, Germany). After washing with PBS, the
coverslips were mounted. For documentation of all fluorescent images, a Zeiss
(Jena, Germany) LSM 510 confocal microscope equipped with 2.8 software was
used.
Analysis of the EGFP fluorescence reporter signal in mouse nervous
tissues
Sixteen-day-old Cx47 EGFP mice and wild-type littermates were
anesthetized and perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) in PBS via the left
cardiac ventricle. The brain, spinal cord, optic nerve, and sciatic nerve were
isolated, postfixed in 2% PFA in PBS at 4°C overnight, washed in PBS, and
incubated in 15% sucrose in PBS for 2 d at 4°C. After embedding in
Tissue-Tec (Sakura, Zoeterwoude, The Netherlands), cryostat sections (12
µm) were thawed and mounted on SuperFrost Plus glass slides (Fisher
Scientific, Houston, TX), air-dried, and used for immediate fluorescence and
immunofluorescence analyses.
For immunofluorescence analyses, the following mouse monoclonal antibodies
were applied: (1) to myelin basic protein (MBP) (Serotec, Duesseldorf,
Germany), 1:50 diluted; (2) to oligodendrocytic 2', 3'-cyclic
nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase (CNPase) (Sigma, Saint Louis, MO), 1:500
diluted; (3) to neuronal nuclei (NeuN) (Chemicon, Temecula, CA), 1:400
diluted; and (4) to astrocytic glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP; Sigma),
1:500 diluted. Furthermore, rabbit polyclonal antibodies to S100
(Swant,
Bellinzona, Switzerland) were used at a dilution of 1:1000. The tissue
sections were washed with PBS, and nonspecific binding was blocked by 1% goat
serum with 0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS for 20 min at room temperature, followed
by 2 hr of blocking in mouse on mouse (MOM) IgG blocking reagent (Vector
Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) at room temperature. The primary antibodies were
diluted in MOM diluent (Vector Laboratories) and used for incubation at
4°C overnight. Controls were performed without primary antibodies. After
two washings in PBS, the specimen were incubated with secondary antibodies
(Alexa Fluor 594-conjugated goat anti-mouse; Molecular Probes) diluted 1:400
in MOM diluent or Cy3-conjugated goat anti-rabbit antibodies (Dianova,
Hamburg, Germany) diluted 1:1500 for 4 hr at room temperature, washed three
times with PBS, mounted on coverslips, and analyzed as described above.
Patch-clamp analysis and single-cell reverse transcription-PCR
Tissue preparation and recording setup. Cx47
EGFP(+/-), Cx47
EGFP(-/-), and
proteolipid protein (PLP)-GFP mice (Fuss
et al., 2000
) of postnatal ages between 16 and 42 d were used, and
frontal brain slices were prepared as described previously
(Steinhäuser et al.,
1992
). For patch-clamp analysis in situ, slices were
placed in a perfusing chamber installed on the stage of a microscope
(Axioskop; Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany). The chamber was continuously perfused
with oxygenated standard solution containing (in mM): 150 NaCl, 5
KCl, 2 MgSO4, 2 CaCl2, 10 HEPES, and 10 glucose, pH 7.4.
The pipette solution contained (in mM): 130 KCl, 0.5
CaCl2, 2 MgCl2, 5
1,2-bis(2-amino-phenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic
acid, 10 HEPES, and 3 Na2-ATP, pH 7.2. Recording pipettes were
fabricated from borosilicate capillaries (Hilgenberg, Malsfeld, Germany).
Recordings (at room temperature) were obtained from GFP-labeled cells located
in the stratum oriens of the hippocampal CA1 subregion and the corpus
callosum. Membrane currents were measured with the patch-clamp technique in
the whole-cell configuration. Signals were amplified (EPC 9/2; HEKA
Elektronik, Lambrecht, Germany), filtered (3 or 10 kHz), and monitored with
TIDA software (HEKA Elektronik). Capacitance and series resistance
compensation (4050%) were used to improve voltage-clamp control.
Single-cell reverse transcription-PCR. To establish an
intron-spanning reverse transcription (RT)-PCR, we screened a rat hippocampus
cDNA library (Stratagene 936518). We obtained three independent Cx47 cDNA
clones revealing an intronexon transition at position -28 [position 1
is the first nucleotide of the initiation codon; GenBank (European Molecular
Biology Laboratory) accession number AJ276435
[GenBank]
], a 5112 bp intron, attributable
to comparison with mouse genomic DNA, and a 5' exon of at least 90 bp.
Cell harvesting followed a strategy described previously
(Schröder et al., 2002
).
Subsequently, RT was performed in a final volume of
10 µl, adding an
RT buffer (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany), dNTPs (final concentration, 4 x 250
µM; Applied Biosystems, Weiterstadt, Germany), a random
hexanucleotide primer (50 µM; Roche Molecular Biochemicals), 20
U of RNasin (Promega), and 0.5 µl of Sensiscript reverse transcriptase
(Qiagen). Single-stranded cDNA synthesis was performed at 37°C (1 hr). A
nested PCR was performed, using the product obtained after the first round as
a template for the second round. The reaction conditions and the purification
of the PCR products were similar to those described by Schröder et al.
(2002
). The Cx47 sense primer
was 5'-TAGCCCCACAGTATGCCCTTAG (position -118), and the antisense primer
was 5'-CGTCTGCGCTCCTGTTCC (position 308). For the second PCR, the
following nested primers were used: sense,
5'-CCGA-AGGTTTGCATTTCCAGCCTGGAG (position -57); and antisense,
5'-CAGGTACATGACAGAAGGTGTGG (position 253). Products were identified by
agarose gel electrophoresis (1.5%, stained with ethidium bromide) using a
molecular weight marker (
X174 HincII digest; Eurogentec,
Seraing, Belgium).
For positive control, two-round RT-PCR was performed with 2 ng of DNA-free
total mouse RNA and primers as described above. Subsequent gel analysis did
not detect any nonspecific products. Amplification of Cx47 in cells of PLP-GFP
mice was always paralleled by detection of
-actin as a positive control
(Schröder et al., 2002
).
This approach was not feasible in the case of Cx47
EGFP(+/-) mice,
presumably because of the decreased amount of Cx47 mRNA attributable to
deletion of one allele. Omission of reverse transcriptase served as a negative
control and confirmed the specificity of the reaction. The corresponding sense
and antisense primers were located on different exons to prevent amplification
of genomic DNA. The specificity of RT-PCR was confirmed by restriction
analysis. Thereto, the second PCR round was repeated using 2 µl of the PCR
product after the first PCR amplification as a template. The product was
purified and dissolved in water (25 µl). The Cx47 cDNA was cut with
MboI (New England Biolabs, Frankfurt, Germany). Seven microliters of
the respective PCR product were incubated in 10 U of restriction enzyme (6 hr,
37°C). The cDNA fragments were separated with gel electrophoresis.
Light and electron microscopy of optic nerve and spinal cord
Anesthetized Cx47
EGFP(-/-), Cx47
EGFP(+/-), and
wild-type Cx47 (+/+)
littermates (514 weeks old) as well as Cx32/Cx47-double-deficient mice
and their wild-type littermates (45 weeks old) were perfused with 6%
glutaraldehyde via the left cardiac ventricle. The proximal optic nerve, the
intracranial optic nerve, thoracic segments of the spinal cord, and the
sciatic nerve were isolated, postfixed in 1% phosphate-buffered
OsO4 in 0.1 M sucrose, and embedded in Epon 812. The
semithin sections (1 µm) were stained with toluidine blue and pyronin.
Ultrathin sections were contrasted with uranyl acetate as well as lead citrate
and examined with a Siemens AG (Erlangen, Germany) electron microscope as
described previously (Büssow,
1978
).
All animal handling was done in strict accordance with local institutional
and governmental guidelines and conformed to the recommendations of the
Society for Neuroscience.
 |
Results
|
|---|
Generation of Cx47EGFP mice
We replaced the mouse Cx47 coding region with the EGFP cDNA and the HPRT
minigene by homologous recombination (Fig.
1a) in HPRT-deficient HM-1 embryonic stem cells (Magin et
al., 1992
,
1998
). Of 232 HAT-resistant
clones, 30 clones were screened positive for homologous recombination by PCR.
This was verified by Southern blot analysis. Three of these targeted clones
were microinjected into C57BL/6 blastocysts (1520 mutant ES cells per
blastocyst). All of these clones yielded high percentages (80100%) of
coat color chimeric mice. At least one male chimeric mouse of each clone led
to germ line transmission of the altered Cx47 allele after backcrossing with
C57BL/6. Mice with heterozygous deletion of Cx47
[Cx47EGFP(+/-)] were
intercrossed to obtain
Cx47(+/+),
Cx47EGFP(+/-), and
Cx47EGFP(-/-)
littermates. Genotypes were analyzed by PCR
(Fig. 1c) and Southern
blot hybridization (Fig.
1b). Cx47EGFP heterozygous (+/-) and
homozygous (-/-) mice showed no obvious anatomical or behavioral
abnormalities. Female and male
Cx47EGFP(-/-) mice were
fertile. So far, we have analyzed 14 litters with a total of 106 mice
resulting from the interbreeding of
Cx47EGFP(+/-) mice. Of
these, 22 (21%) were of the
Cx47EGFP(-/-)
genotype.
The EGFP reporter gene is expressed in accordance with Cx47
The tissue distribution of Cx47 mRNA in mouse has been described previously
(Teubner et al., 2001
). Cx47
transcripts were mainly detected in brain and spinal cord with an expression
peak at approximately day 14 after birth. In addition to this earlier study,
Cx47 transcripts were detected by Northern blot analysis in the optic nerve of
wild type mice (results not shown). Northern blot analysis of
Cx47EGFP(-/-),
Cx47EGFP(+/-), and
Cx47(+/+) wild-type
mice with a probe against Cx47 (Fig.
2a) showed the expected decrease of Cx47 mRNA in
heterozygous (+/-) and no transcripts in null (-/-) mice. In wild-type (+/+)
mice, the strongest expression of Cx47 mRNA was seen in the spinal cord,
followed by cerebellum and cerebrum; no signal could be detected in the heart.
As expected, EGFP mRNA was found to be expressed instead of Cx47 mRNA and was
abundant in homozygous
Cx47EGFP(-/-) animals,
less frequent in heterozygous animals, and absent in wild-type animals
(Fig. 2b). The
intensity of EGFP mRNA expression in the different tissues tested was
proportional to Cx47 mRNA expression in wild-type mice. We conclude that EGFP
in these transgenic animals can be considered a reliable replacing reporter
for Cx47 transcription.

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Figure 2. Northern blot analysis of Cx47 expression (a) and EGFP expression
(b) in adult mouse tissues. Equal amounts of total RNA (20 µg)
from wild-type (+/+), heterozygous (+/-), and homozygous (-/-) Cx47
EGFP mice (littermates) were applied as demonstrated by staining of
28S and 18S ribosomal RNA with ethidium bromide (top). The blotted RNA
(bottom) was probed with a 1.6 kb XbaI fragment containing part of
the Cx47 coding region and 3'-untranslated region (a) and a 1.0
kb SalIAflII fragment of the pEGFP-1 vector
containing the EGFP-coding region and the SV40 poly(A) signal (b). The size of
the corresponding transcripts is indicated in kilobases on the left.
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Characterization of antibodies to Cx47
Antipeptide antibodies to the last 15 amino acid residues of the C-terminal
Cx47 region were raised in guinea pigs. This region was selected for
immunological reasons; however, it should be noted that it has slight sequence
homology with mouse Cx45. Western blot and immunofluorescence analysis were
used to characterize the Cx47 antibodies.
Western blot analysis of appropriately transfected HeLa cell lysates with
antibodies to Cx47, detected by 125I-labeled protein A, revealed
the corresponding Cx47 protein and Cx47-EGFP fusion protein at
50 and 75
kDa, relative to standard protein markers
(Fig. 3a). Because
EGFP has a molecular mass of 27 kDa, the Cx47-EGFP fusion protein was expected
to migrate at
74 kDa. For HeLa wild-type and HeLa-Cx45 control lysates,
no bands could be detected at these positions. Labeled bands with Cx47
antibodies were seen at
30 and 100 kDa in all HeLa lysates, indicating
some cross-reaction of the Cx47 antibodies with other possible proteins.
Western blot analyses of mouse tissues using the protocol described above
were not successful. Therefore, we used immunoprecipitation to concentrate the
Cx47 protein. To avoid interference by the heavy chain of the antibodies used
for precipitation, we performed immunodetection with biotinylated Cx47
antibodies using a streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase (ECL) detection system.
Under these conditions, the Cx47 protein could be clearly detected in
immunoprecipitates of the cerebellum/brainstem and spinal cord of wild-type
(+/+) mice (Fig. 3b).
In immunoprecipitates from
Cx47EGFP(-/-)
littermates and in heart control tissue, Cx47 was absent. In cerebrum of
wild-type mice, the Cx47 signal was very weak, i.e., only slightly different
from the Cx47-null control. The levels of Cx47 protein expression shown in
Figure 3b cannot be
strictly quantitatively compared, because the protein concentrations in
lysates prepared from wild-type and
Cx47EGFP(-/-) animals
were different, as indicated in Figure
3b, and the multiple processing steps involved in
immunoprecipitation and subsequent detection might not have been
quantitative.
Immunofluorescence analyses with Cx47 antibodies of HeLa cells transfected
with Cx47 or Cx47-EGFP showed fluorescent puncta on cell membranes at sites of
cell contacts, as expected for gap junction plaques
(Fig. 4a,c). Under the
same conditions, immunostaining could be detected neither in HeLa wild-type
cells (Fig. 4b) nor in
HeLa cells stably transfected with Cx45 cDNA
(Butterweck et al., 1994
)
(results not shown). The native EGFP fluorescence of the Cx47-EGFP fusion
protein was closely colocalized with the immunofluorescence signals obtained
with Cx47 antibodies (Fig.
4c,d). Cx47 antibodies reacted specifically with Cx47 in
HeLa-Cx47 cells. No specific staining was seen after immunofluorescence
analysis of mouse wild-type tissue sections in comparison with Cx47-null
tissues. Presumably, Cx47 is expressed at a much lower level in mouse CNS than
in Cx47-transfected HeLa cells, and the Cx47 antibodies are not sensitive
enough to detect low levels of the Cx47 protein.

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Figure 4. Immunostaining (red) of Cx47 in HeLa-Cx47 (a), HeLa wild-type
(b), and HeLa-Cx47-EGFP (c) cells. The EGFP fluorescent
signals (d, green) corresponding to Cx47-EGFP fusion proteins were
primarily colocalized with Cx47 immunofluorescent signals (c).
Typical punctate gap junction staining was detected on contact membranes of
Cx47-transfected cells (arrows), whereas no such staining could be detected in
HeLa wild-type controls. Nuclei in HeLa-Cx47 and HeLa wild-type cells were
stained with TOTO-1 (blue, false color); nuclei in HeLa-Cx47-EGFP cells were
not stained but are visible because of higher background staining. Scale bars,
20 µm.
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Localization of EGFP expression in Cx47EGFP mice
Analysis of the fluorescent EGFP reporter signal in different nerve tissue
sections yielded faint but clear labeling of cell nuclei and perikarya. As
expected on the basis of the above results, the EGFP signals were most intense
in Cx47EGFP(-/-)
animals at the age of
2 weeks. The EGFP reporter expression was less
intense in older and in heterozygous mice. EGFP fluorescence was most
frequently but not exclusively detected in cells of the cerebellar white
matter (Fig. 5b), the
corpus callosum (Fig.
5d), the spinal cord white matter
(Fig. 5e), and the
optic nerve (Fig. 5f).
Large numbers of EGFP-labeled cells were also seen in the commissura anterior,
the chiasma opticum, and the striatum. No EGFP labeling was found in
corresponding wild-type tissues (Fig.
5a,c). The sciatic nerve of
Cx47EGFP(-/-) animals
(Fig. 5g), as well as
the heart and kidney of these animals (results not shown), were negative for
EGFP fluorescence.

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Figure 5. EGFP signal (green) as reporter for Cx47-expressing cells and
immunostaining (red) for MBP in wild-type (+/+) and homozygous Cx47
EGFP (-/-) mice. Shown are double (red, green) confocal
images of cerebellar white matter (wm; a, b), corpus callosum (cc;
c, d), the funiculus dorsalis (fd) in a transverse section of the
spinal cord (e), a longitudinal section of the optic nerve
(f), and a longitudinal section of the sciatic nerve (g).
All corresponding micrographs (ag) were recorded with the same
microscope settings. No EGFP signal was observed in wild-type tissues (a,
c) and Cx47
EGFP(-/-) sciatic nerve
(g). Scale bars: a, b, eg, 50 µm; c, d,
100 µm.
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Cx47 is expressed in oligodendrocytes and in some S100
-positive
cells but not in neurons or in GFAP-positive astrocytes
To further characterize the cellular site(s) of Cx47 expression,
immunofluorescence analyses with cell type-specific antibodies in combination
with EGFP fluorescence, electrophysiological measurements, and single-cell
RT-PCR of EGFP-expressing cells were performed. In the spinal cord,
well-characterized neuronal (NeuN) and astrocytic (GFAP) marker proteins
showed no colocalizaton with the Cx47 reporter
(Fig. 6b,c), whereas
the oligodendrocytic marker CNPase showed colocalization (yellow) in the
cytoplasm close to EGFP-labeled nuclei
(Fig. 6a). These
results were confirmed in several brain regions, including the corpus callosum
and cerebellum. Less uniform colocalization was obtained with S100
, a
cell marker protein considered astrocyte-specific in gray matter of the CNS
(Barger et al., 1992
). In
particular, colocalization (yellow) of S100
immunostaining and Cx47 EGFP
reporter signals was detected in the white matter of spinal cord in
heterozygous and homozygous Cx47EGFP mice
(Fig. 6d). Not all
S100
-positive cells expressed the EGFP signal, and not all EGFP-positive
cells were positive for S100
. In other brain regions, e.g., the
cerebellum, the corpus callosum, or the hippocampus, colocalization between
S100
staining and EGFP fluorescence was rarely found. The optic nerve,
known to be devoid of neuronal cell bodies, showed strong EGFP labeling with a
pearls-on-a-string alignment of labeled cell bodies
(Fig. 5f), which has
previously been described as characteristic for white matter oligodendrocytes
(Peters, 1991
). No EGFP
labeling was detected in the triangular profiles of hippocampal pyramidal
cells (CA1CA4), in granule cells of the dentate gyrus (results not
shown), and in the Purkinje cell and granule cell layers of the cerebellum
(Fig. 5b). These
neuronal cells have previously been reported to express Cx47 mRNA on the basis
of in situ hybridization (Teubner
et al., 2001
).
Patch-clamp analysis of fluorescent cells in
Cx47EGFP(+/-) and
PLP-GFP mice
Green fluorescent cells were selected in brain slices from
Cx47EGFP(+/-) mice, and
membrane currents were evoked between -160 and +20 mV
(Fig. 7a). Recordings
were obtained from cells in the corpus callosum (n = 16) and in the
stratum oriens of the hippocampal CA1 region (n = 16). The protocols
activated almost symmetrical outward and inward transmembrane currents, which
in most cases (29 of 32 cells) considerably decayed during the voltage steps.
Voltage-gated K+ and Na+ currents were never observed.
The IV relationships were linear or slightly inwardly
rectifying, and currents reversed at -66.0 ± 3.9 mV, indicating that
they were mainly carried by K+ (amplitudes taken at the end of the
voltage steps; n = 32; Fig.
7a, right). The current decay could be well fitted by a
single exponential yielding time constants of
= 6.3 ± 2.0 msec
(V, +10 mV; Fig. 7a,
middle). The resting membrane potential of the cells recorded was -67.4
± 3.8 mV, and their input resistance, determined from currents evoked
by a depolarization from -60 to -50 mV, amounted to 112 ± 66
M
.

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Figure 7. Electrophysiological properties of GFP-labeled cells in Cx47
EGFP(+/-) and PLP-GFP
mice. Membrane currents were activated between -160 and +20 mV (50 msec; 10 mV
increment; holding potential, -70 mV). a, b, Right,
IV plots when taking amplitudes 2 msec (triangles) and 50 msec
(diamonds) after the onset of the voltage steps. a, In a fluorescent
cell, presumed an oligodendrocyte of the corpus callosum of a Cx47
EGFP(+/-) mouse
(resting potential, -60 mV), currents reversed at -67 and -59 mV,
respectively. b, A GFP-positive oligodendrocyte in the corpus
callosum of a PLP-GFP mouse (resting potential, -70 mV) displayed reversal
potentials of -67 and -64 mV. In both cells, currents decayed with similar
time constants as indicated (V, +10 mV; a single exponential was fit to the
data recorded between 3 and 25 msec after onset of the voltage steps ; time
window marked by dashed vertical bars). c, Subsequent to functional
characterization, the cytoplasm of the cells shown in a and
b was harvested for transcript analysis. PCR products specific to
Cx47 (334 bp) were identified by gel electrophoresis (lanes #1, #2 correspond
to the cells in a, b, respectively). Cx47 cDNA was completely
digested by the restriction endonuclease MboI, yielding fragments of
239 and 95 bp (lanes #1c, #2c). d, A GFP-negative CA1 pyramidal
neuron (lane #3; PLP-GFP mouse) and an EGFP-negative astrocyte (lane #4; CA1
stratum oriens, Cx47
EGFP(+/-) mouse) were
analyzed as described above. Both cells lacked Cx47 transcripts, although mRNA
of the housekeeping gene -actin (238 bp) was found (right). As a length
marker, HincII-digested DNA from X174 phages was used.
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To compare electrophysiological properties of fluorescent cells in
Cx47EGFP (+/-) mice
with those of unequivocally identified mature oligodendrocytes, we used
transgenic mice with PLP promoter-controlled GFP expression
(Fuss et al., 2000
).
Fluorescent oligodendrocytes were investigated in the corpus callosum
(n = 3) and in the stratum oriens of the hippocampal CA1 region
(n = 7) as described above. The whole-cell current patterns evoked
upon depolarizing and hyperpolarizing voltage steps
(Fig. 7b) closely
resembled those characteristic of EGFP-positive cells in
Cx47EGFP(+/-) mice,
with voltage-gated K+ and Na+ currents always being
absent (Fuss et al., 2000
).
Resting membrane potential (-65.2 ± 8.9 mV), input resistance (90
± 55 M
), reversal potential of the IV plots
(-64.7 ± 7.2 mV), and the kinetics of current decay (
= 6.4
± 1.6 msec, +10 mV; n = 10) determined in GFP expressing
oligodendrocytes of PLP-GFP mice did not differ from the respective parameters
of fluorescent cells in
Cx47EGFP(+/-) mice.
Recordings were also obtained from green fluorescent cells in the CA1
stratum oriens and the corpus callosum of
Cx47EGFP(-/-) mice
(n = 5). Resting membrane potential (-66.6 ± 7.1 mV) and
current decay (
= 6.6 ± 2.2 msec) were similar to the respective
parameters determined in cells from PLP-GFP and Cx47EGFP
(+/-) mice, whereas we noted a somewhat higher input resistance
(187 ± 45 M
). Tail current analysis was performed to determine
the reversal potential (Vrev) of the decaying symmetrical currents.
Similar to previous reports, Vrev was strongly dependent on the
duration of the preceding depolarizing test pulse. Prolongation of the test
pulse (V, +20 mV) from 1 to 20 msec led to a significant shift in
Vrev (from -54 ± 12.7 to -18.5 ± 12.6 mV; n
= 4), indicating a change in the transmembrane K+ gradient during
the depolarization (results not shown) (cf.
Berger et al., 1991
;
Steinhäuser et al., 1992
;
Chvatal et al., 1995
).
Detection of Cx47 transcripts in fluorescent cells of
Cx47EGFP(+/-) and
PLP-GFP mice
To test for the presence of Cx47 transcripts in green fluorescent cells of
both Cx47EGFP(+/-) and
PLP-GFP transgenic mice, the cytoplasm of individual cells was harvested
subsequent to current analysis, and single-cell RT-PCRs were performed using
Cx47-specific primers. Cx47 transcripts were detected in fluorescent cells of
Cx47EGFP(+/-)
(n = 4) and PLP-GFP (n = 8 of 14) mice. Identity and
specificity of the PCR products were confirmed by restriction analysis
(Fig. 7c). In
contrast, no Cx47 transcripts were detected in CA1 pyramidal neurons
(n = 4) and in hippocampal astrocytes (n = 4) with different
types of voltage-activated K+ and Na+ currents
(Steinhäuser et al.,
1994
). The neurons and two of the astrocytes were recorded in
PLP-GFP mice; the remaining two astrocytes were from a
Cx47EGFP(+/-) mouse
(Fig. 7d). None of
them showed intrinsic fluorescence.
Taken together, our results show that Cx47 is expressed in oligodendrocytes
and some S100
-positive cells of the CNS but not in neurons. This
corrects our previous incorrect assignment of Cx47 mRNA to certain neurons
(Teubner et al., 2001
). At
that time, Cx47-null mice were not yet generated in our laboratory. Thus,
tissues from these mice could not be used as negative controls for in
situ hybridization.
Cx47-deficient mice display myelination abnormalities
All investigated CNS nerve tissues of homozygous
Cx47EGFP(-/-)
(n = 4) but not of heterozygous
Cx47EGFP(+/-) or
wild-type Cx47(+/+)
littermates showed sporadic vacuolation of nerve fibers (Figs.
8b,
9b,
10a,b). A striking
accumulation of these vacuoles was observed in the proximal segment of the
optic nerve close to the eye where myelination starts
(Hildebrand et al., 1985
).
Most but not all of the vacuoles were found in internodal regions. There were
three different localizations of these vacuoles in relation to the myelin: (1)
between the compact myelin and the inner loop
(Fig. 10a) seen in
most of the cases, (2) embedded in compact myelin
(Fig. 10b), and (3)
in direct contact with the periaxonal space (not shown). At all three
localizations, the vacuoles were extracellular, surrounded by at least some
compact myelin. Similarly vacuolated nerve fibers were reported for myelin
under other pathological conditions, for example, in UDP-galactose-ceramide
galactosyltransferase-deficient mice
(Coetzee et al., 1996
;
Bosio et al., 1998
) and in
white matter from sheep with copper poisoning
(Ludwin, 1995
). Nerve fibers
of Cx47EGFP(-/-)
animals with no vacuoles showed no obvious difference in myelination compared
with Cx47(+/+)
wild-type mice. Myelination in the peripheral nervous system of
Cx47EGFP(-/-) mice was
found to be phenotypically normal.

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Figure 8. Longitudinal semithin sections of the optic nerve, close to the eye. The
partly myelinated transition zone of the optic nerve starts 250 µm
behind the eye bulb (dashed line). In contrast to the wild-type tissue
(a), the myelinated region of the optic nerve from Cx47
EGFP(-/-) mice showed
many vacuolated nerve fibers (b). Confocal microscopic analysis of
EGFP fluorescence (light gray) in the same region of Cx47
EGFP(-/-) mice
(c) demonstrated that Cx47 expression did not occur in front of this
transition zone. Scale bars, 100 µm.
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Figure 9. Transverse sections through the partly myelinated transition zone of the
optic nerve. In wild-type tissue (a) as well as in Cx47
EGFP(-/-) tissue
(b), thin myelin sheets of the first internodes and nonmyelinated
nerve fibers were seen. In this transition zone, the vacuolated nerve fibers
of the Cx47 EGFP(-/-)
animal were very prominent (asterisks). A, Astrocytes. Scale bars,
3.6 µm.
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Figure 10. Transverse sections through the partly myelinated transition zone of the
optic nerve of Cx47
EGFP(-/-) mice as shown
in Figure 9. Two types of
vacuolated nerve fibers are shown. a, The two nerve fibers exhibit
vacuoles (asterisks) between the inner lamellae of the oligodendrocyte
(arrows) and the compact lamellae of the myelin sheet. b, The vacuole
(asterisk) of this nerve fiber is located between compact myelin sheets. Scale
bars, 1.2 µm.
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Cx32/Cx47-double-deficient mice show prominent myelin abnormalities
accompanied by a strong action tremor
First analyses of Cx32/Cx47-double deficient mice
(Menichella et al., 2001
)
revealed a phenotype resembling that of the shiverer mouse (cf.
Readhead and Hood, 1990
),
which started 34 weeks after birth. These animals died
3 months
after birth.
Preliminary analysis of our Cx32/Cx47-double-deficient mice (n =
9, eight male and one female) showed that these mice developed cumulative
neurological abnormalities, starting with a tremor at
34 weeks
after birth. Later, they developed tonic seizures and sporadic convulsions.
All of them died between 5 and 10 weeks after birth (on average after 51 d).
The myelination of the double-deficient mice (n = 3 male, 45
weeks old) was delayed in development compared with wild-type littermates.
Electron microscopy of these double-deficient mice again showed vacuolation as
described above for the
Cx47EGFP(-/-) mice,
which, however, was more severe and more obvious in nerve fibers of all
regions of the CNS. Vacuoles were not only predominant in the transition zone
of the optic nerve as for the
Cx47EGFP(-/-)
single-deficient mice but also very prominent at the chiasma opticum
(Fig. 11) and in the spinal
cord. In contrast to CNS myelin, the peripheral myelin of the
Cx32/Cx47-double-deficient mice did not display obvious morphological
abnormalities in these 4-week-old mice.

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Figure 11. Transverse semithin sections through the intracranial part of the optic
nerve immediately in front of the optic chiasm of 4-week-old Cx32
(y/+)/Cx47
(+/+) wild-type (wt;
a), 5-week-old Cx47
EGFP(-/-)
single-deficient (b), and a Cx32
(y/-)/Cx47
EGFP(-/-)
double-deficient (c) mice (b, c are littermates). The
double-deficient mice exhibited strongly enhanced vacuolation of nerve fibers
all over the CNS, whereas the Cx47
EGFP(-/-) mice showed
very rare vacuolation (asterisks). Cx47
EGFP(-/-) mice
exhibited increased vacuolation only in the transition zone of the optic nerve
(Fig. 9b). KO,
Knock-out. Scale bars, 16 µm.
|
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 |
Discussion
|
|---|
In this study, we replaced the Cx47 coding region by EGFP in transgenic
mice, which were then used to examine cell type-specific expression and
function of Cx47. As expected, deletion of the Cx47 coding region resulted in
complete loss of the Cx47 transcript and protein. Homozygous mutant mice
developed normally and showed no apparent abnormalities. Northern blot
analyses revealed that the EGFP reporter transcript showed a tissue-specific
pattern of expression very similar to that of the Cx47 transcript. By
single-cell RT-PCR of
Cx47EGFP(+/-) mice, we
colocalized Cx47 transcript and EGFP expression. In Cx47EGFP mice,
EGFP expression was found to be a reliable reporter for Cx47.
Cx47 is expressed in oligodendrocytes
We detected colocalization of EGFP with oligodendrocytic CNPase and found
most of the EGFP-labeled cells in highly myelinated, MBP-positive white matter
tissue. In contrast, the EGFP (Cx47) reporter signal did not colocalize with
neuronal NeuN or astrocytic GFAP cell markers. Together with
electrophysiological analysis of EGFP (Cx47)-positive cells, our results show
unequivocally that Cx47 is mainly expressed in CNS oligodendrocytes but not in
neurons. This has also been reported by Menichella et al.
(2001
) on the basis of
comparative in situ hybridizations of wild-type and Cx47 (which was
called Cx46.6 by these authors)-deficient mice. Future studies will have to
show whether there is a difference between Cx47 expression in white and gray
matter oligodendrocytes (Pastor et al.,
1998
) and whether Cx47 is expressed in all oligodendrocytes or
only in some subpopulations. Interestingly, in some cells of spinal cord white
matter, the EGFP (Cx47) reporter signal colocalized with S100
.
S100
has been described as an astrocytic marker protein in gray matter
CNS (Seifert et al., 1997
;
Savchenko et al., 2000
;
Kukley et al., 2001
). Thus,
although S100
expression in spinal cord has not been well characterized,
we presume that Cx47 is also expressed by some astrocytes that constitute a
strikingly heterogeneous cell population
(Matthias et al., 2003
).
The assumption of a predominant oligodendroglial location of Cx47 was
substantiated by functional and transcriptional analyses of single cells.
Patch-clamp recordings revealed that EGFP-positive cells in the corpus
callosum and hippocampus of
Cx47EGFP(+/-) and
Cx47EGFP(-/-) mice
showed almost symmetrical, decaying K+ currents, whereas
voltage-gated K+ or Na+ currents were never observed.
Tail current analyses revealed a significant positive shift in the reversal
potential on prolonged membrane depolarization. Cells with a similar
whole-cell current profile were previously identified as mature
oligodendrocytes in various CNS regions of mouse and rat, and it was suggested
that the decaying symmetrical currents reflected a change in the transmembrane
K+ gradient during the voltage steps
(Berger et al., 1991
;
Steinhäuser et al., 1992
;
Chvatal et al., 1995
). The
preferential location of Cx47 in CNS oligodendrocytes was further corroborated
by the finding that GFP-positive cells in transgenic PLP-GFP mice expressed
Cx47 transcripts and displayed transmembrane current patterns similar to those
of fluorescent cells in
Cx47EGFP(+/-) mice.
Connexin expression in oligodendrocytes
Together with Cx29 and Cx32, Cx47 is the third connexin described in
oligodendrocytes (Dermietzel et al.,
1989
; Altevogt et al.,
2002
), indicating some diversity of connexin hemichannels in these
cells. In contrast to Cx29 and Cx32, Cx47 is only found in CNS myelinating
cells and not in PNS Schwann cells. Previous analyses, which localized Cx45 to
oligodendrocytes, were all based on immunohistochemical assays with Cx45
antibodies (Dermietzel et al.,
1997
; Kunzelmann et al.,
1997
). We now know that the Cx45 antibodies used by Kunzelmann et
al. (1997
) cross-react to some
extent with Cx47 protein, which was only identified
(Teubner et al., 2001
) after
the study of Kunzelmann et al.
(1997
) was published.
Cx45+/- mice carrying a lacZ reporter gene
(Krüger et al., 2000
) do
not show
-galactosidase staining in mature oligodendrocytes
(Maxeiner et al., 2003
).
The present study demonstrates that Cx47 antibodies do not cross-react with
Cx45 protein, which exhibits an overall amino acid identity of 49% to Cx47.
Although Cx47 protein could easily be detected with Cx47 antibodies in
HeLa-Cx47-transfected cells, no specific Cx47 immunofluorescent signals were
found in mouse CNS, by comparison with Cx47-deficient tissues. This could be
attributable to Cx47-containing gap junction plaques in oligodendrocytes being
very small compared with those in HeLa-Cx47 cells. Future analyses, possibly
with more sensitive Cx47 antibodies, have to clarify the topological
localization of Cx47 protein, which may participate in the formation of gap
junctions between oligodendrocytes and neighboring cells
(Rash et al., 2001b
) or of
reflexive gap junctions between different sheets of myelin at paranodal
regions of the oligodendrocytes (Sandri et
al., 1977
; Li et al.,
1997
).
Redundancy or compensatory regulation of connexin expression in
oligodendrocytes may explain the relatively mild phenotype of Cx32-deficient
mice (Nelles et al., 1996
;
Anzini et al., 1997
;
Scherer et al., 1998
) and
Cx47-null mice (this work). However, we did not find significant upregulation
or downregulation of Cx29 or Cx32 transcripts by Northern blot analysis of
Cx47EGFP(-/-) and
wild-type tissues (results not shown).
On the other hand, the severe phenotype and the early death of
Cx32/Cx47-double-deficient mice point to the functional importance of
expressing at least one of these connexins for correct myelination by
oligodendrocytes.
Phenotypic abnormalities in Cx47-deficient myelin
The phenotypic abnormality in
Cx47EGFP(-/-) mice does
not seem to be Cx47-specific but a general indication of disordered myelin
(Martini et al., 1998
),
because similar vacuolation has been reported for other myelin-deficient mice
(Bosio et al., 1998
) or after
copper poisoning of sheep (Ludwin,
1995
). In the latter case, vacuoles were explained to indicate the
incapability of cells to regulate fluid exchange, which could also arise from
disturbed gap junctional intercellular communication. Alternatively, these
vacuoles might have developed in response to disturbed signal transduction
across myelin or because of a lack of adhesion to other nonconnexin proteins,
as proposed for Cx29 (Li et al.,
2002
), which could result in myelin deformation.
Previously, continuous myelin turnover, irregular myelin, and short
internodes have been described to occur in the transition zone of the optic
nerve (Hildebrand et al.,
1985
). The increased appearance of vacuoles in this transition
zone of Cx47-deficient mice but not in wild-type littermates suggests that
Cx47 may be involved in myelin formation or differentiation of
oligodendrocytes. The maximum of Cx47 transcripts at approximately day 14
after birth (Teubner et al.,
2001
) appears to be in line with this hypothesis. As shown with
several other mouse mutants, including Cx32-deficient mice, the immune system
appears to be involved in the pathogenesis of some, so far mainly peripheral
myelin disorders (Kobsar et al.,
2002
; Maurer et al.,
2002
). Therefore, future studies will have to clarify whether
microglial cells are also associated with CNS myelin deformation in
Cx47-deficient and Cx32/Cx47-double-deficient mice.
 |
Footnotes
|
|---|
Received Jan. 2, 2003;
revised Mar. 20, 2003;
accepted Mar. 21, 2003.
This work was supported by German Research Association Grants JA 942/4-1,
SFBs 400, and TR3 and Fonds of the Chemical Industry (C.S. and K.W.). B.O.
received a stipend from the Graduiertenkolleg Pathogenese des Nervensystems.
We gratefully acknowledge the excellent technical assistance of Ina Fibich,
Joana Fischer, Michaela Lindemann, Ingrid Krahner, and Gaby Schwarz and thank
Dr. Alberto Perez-Bouza for suggestions and comments on this work.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Klaus Willecke, Institut für
Genetik, Universität Bonn, Römerstrasse 164, D-53117 Bonn, Germany.
E-mail:
genetik{at}uni-bonn.de.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/234549-11$15.00/0
 |
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