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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 1, 2003, 23(9):3669
Evidence for Long-Lasting Cholinergic Control of Gap Junctional
Communication between Adrenal Chromaffin Cells
Agnès O.
Martin1, 2,
Marie-Noëlle
Mathieu1, and
Nathalie C.
Guérineau1
1 Institut National de la Santé et de la
Recherche Médicale (INSERM) Unité 469, Centre National de
la Recherche Scientifique/INSERM de Pharmacologie et d'Endocrinologie,
34094 Montpellier Cedex 5, France, and 2 Division of
Molecular Neurobiology, National Institute for Medical Research, London
NW7 1AA, United Kingdom
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ABSTRACT |
We investigated long-lasting interactions that may occur between
two forms of intercellular signaling: cholinergic synaptic transmission
and gap junction-mediated coupling in the rat adrenal medulla. The
junctional coupling between chromaffin cells was studied during reduced
or blocked synaptic transmission in adrenal slices. First, cholinergic
synaptic activity was reduced by pharmacological treatment.
Bath-application of the nicotinic receptor antagonists hexamethonium,
the oxystilbene derivative F3, or -bungarotoxin, acting at distinct
neuronal-like postsynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs),
significantly increased the incidence of Lucifer yellow passage
(dye coupling) between chromaffin cells (p > 0.7 in treated slices vs p = 0.4 in controls).
Dye coupling was associated with an elevated macroscopic conductance of
the junctional current measured by dual patch-clamp. Pharmacological
inhibition of protein trafficking from the trans-Golgi network to the
plasma membrane by either brefeldin A or nocodazole pretreatment
prevented the effects of nAChR antagonists on dye coupling.
Interestingly, this upregulation of gap junction-mediated coupling in
response to reduced synaptic activity is of physiological relevance,
because it is found in the newborn rat, in which cholinergic synaptic transmission has not yet matured. This mechanism may also be of importance in pathological conditions, because chronic blockade of
synaptic transmission after surgical denervation of the adrenal gland
also resulted in increased dye coupling between chromaffin cells. In
conclusion, our pharmacological, physiological, and pathological data
concur to demonstrate that gap junction-mediated intercellular
communication between chromaffin cells undergoes persistent adaptation
in response to impairment of synaptic activity. These results strongly
suggest that gap junctional communication between chromaffin cells is
under tonic inhibitory control exerted by cholinergic synaptic inputs.
Key words:
synaptic transmission; gap junctions; nicotinic
receptors; rat adrenal slices; splanchnectomized rats; dye coupling; neonates; hexamethonium; brefeldin A; nocodazole
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Introduction |
In integrated biological systems,
the precise coordination of cellular signals arising from distinct
inputs is critical in maintaining physiological function. In the
nervous system, cross talk between chemical synapses and gap
junction-mediated cell-to-cell communication is so pervasive (Haydon,
2001 ) that it is no longer tenable to investigate the mechanisms of
neuronal signal integration without considering the intricate
interactions between both systems of intercellular contacts. Although
synapses represent the main mode of interneuronal communication, it is
now well established that gap junctions are widely expressed in neurons
(Rozental et al., 2000 ; Schmitz et al., 2001 ). The coexistence of
synapses and gap junctions in the same cell has raised the question of functional links that may exist between these two forms of cellular communication. Several reports have described short-term regulatory effects of acute application of neurotransmitters or neuromodulators on
interneuronal gap junctional communication (Piccolino et al., 1982 ,
1984 ; Pereda et al., 1992 ; Hatton and Yang, 1996 ; McMahon and Mattson,
1996 ; Shinohara et al., 2000 ; Lagostena et al., 2001 ). Physiological or
electrically induced activation of synaptic inputs also acutely
modulates intercellular coupling (Hatton and Yang, 1996 , 2001 ; Hatton,
1997 ), indicating that modulation of coupling by synaptically released
factors likely occurs in situ between excitable cells
(Hatton, 1998 ). The effects on gap junction coupling primarily result
from the activation within minutes of intracellular messenger systems
(Ca2+, cAMP, cGMP), suggesting the
modulation of junctional conductances of anchored channels rather than
the targeting of a downstream step affecting connexon number or
trafficking. We report here that in addition to this very short-term
control of gap junctional communication, synaptic inputs can also exert
a long-term regulation of the extent of gap junction-mediated
intercellular coupling between excitable cells. We addressed this issue
in rat adrenal chromaffin cells, because the medulla presents unique
features providing an ideal preparation for studying the interactions
between gap junctions and synaptic activity. Indeed, although
chromaffin cell secretory activity is chiefly regulated
trans-synaptically via the splanchnic nerve (Axelrod, 1971 ), the
interaction of gap junction-mediated signal propagation with synaptic
transmission represents a complementary mechanism for the exocytosis of
catecholamines, as we have shown in slices (Martin et al., 2001 ). To
demonstrate the effect of cholinergic synaptic activity on gap
junction-mediated communication in the adrenal medulla, the junctional
coupling between chromaffin cells was examined in slices in which
either the synaptic inputs or the nicotinic receptors were manipulated. We found an increase in dye coupling after pharmacologically impairing or chronically disrupting synaptic transmission to chromaffin cells.
This upregulation was abolished when protein delivery to the plasma
membrane was inhibited by agents that disrupt the Golgi apparatus. Of
particular physiological interest is the situation observed in neonatal
rats. At birth, dye coupling was upregulated, as could be expected in
light of the immaturity of neurochemical synapses. We propose that gap
junctional coupling in the adrenal medulla undergoes long-term
plasticity as a compensatory response under conditions of reduced
cholinergic synaptic transmission. Furthermore, our results indicate
that under control conditions, gap junctional coupling is under tonic
inhibitory control.
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Materials and Methods |
Adrenal slice preparation. Acute adrenal slices were
prepared as reported previously (Martin et al., 2001 ). Briefly, the
adrenal glands were removed from newborn and adult (12- to 16-week-old) female Wistar rats 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,
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), and buffered to pH 7.4. The saline was continuously bubbled with carbogen (95%
O2-5% CO2). In some
experiments, acute slices were prepared from splanchnectomized adult
female rats (n = 5). The left adrenal gland was
denervated by transecting the left splanchnic nerve (surgery performed
by Iffa Credo, L'Arbresle, France). Splanchnectomized
rats were used 2-4 weeks after surgery. The efficacy of the adrenal
denervation was confirmed by the absence of postsynaptic currents in
chromaffin cells during electrophysiological recordings.
For 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.
Real-time imaging of cytosolic calcium.
Ca2+ changes were monitored using a
confocal laser scanning microscope equipped with an Ar/Kr laser
(Odyssey XL with InterVision 1.5.1 software; Noran Instruments
Inc., Middleton, WI) (Guérineau et al., 1998 ). Cells were
viewed with a 63 × 0.9 numerical aperture (NA) achroplan water immersion objective (Zeiss). For measurements of
intracellular calcium concentration
([Ca2+]i), the
largest detection slit (100 µm) of the confocal microscope was used,
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 acetoxymethyl ester (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-over-time tool of the software package was
applied to live images (120 images per second, averaging four frames).
[Ca2+]i changes
were expressed as the F/Fmin ratio, where
Fmin was the minimum fluorescence intensity measured during
the recording. Acquired data and images were then processed for
analysis with Igor Pro 3.16 (Wavemetrics Inc., Lake
Oswego, OR) and NIH Image 1.6.0 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 5-8 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, and 5 HEPES, titrated to pH 7.2 with KOH. The membrane potential of chromaffin cells was recorded under
current-clamp conditions using an EPC-9 patch-clamp amplifier
(Heka Electronik, Lambrecht/Pfalz, Germany) and
filtered at 3 kHz. Spontaneous EPSCs were recorded in chromaffin cells
voltage-clamped at 80 mV in normal external
[K+] and were filtered at 1 kHz. Signals
were acquired and analyzed using Pulse and PulseFit software (version
8.5; Heka Electronik) on a G4 Macintosh computer. 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 (Martin et al., 2001 ).
Membrane potentials of chromaffin cell pairs were recorded under
current-clamp conditions using an EPC-9 dual patch-clamp amplifier
(Heka Electronik) 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 MgCl2, 1.1 EGTA, and 5 HEPES). To determine the macroscopic junctional conductance
(Gj), the I-V curve in
which Ij amplitude was plotted as a
function of the transjunctional voltage
(Vj) was fitted by a computed linear
regression, y = ax + b (where
y corresponds to Ij and
x to Vj).
Gj was then given by the slope
(a) of the linear regression.
Lucifer yellow diffusion. The fluorescent dye Lucifer yellow
(LY)-CH (1 mM) (LY-CH is the hydrazine
form of the dye) was introduced into chromaffin cells using patch
pipettes. Dye transfer between gap junction-coupled cells was
visualized with confocal microscopy using the 488 nm centered
wavelength of the laser beam. The extent of LY diffusion between
chromaffin cells was estimated by counting the number of labeled cells.
The probability of LY diffusion was expressed as a ratio corresponding
to the number of injected cells that show dye transfer to adjacent
cells over the total number of injected cells. Transmitted images were
acquired using the longer wavelength of the laser beam (647 nm), which
penetrated deeply into adrenal slices.
Immunofluorescence and image processing. After dye coupling
experiments, adrenal slices were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde for 1 hr
at room temperature before immunofluorescence. Background noise was
reduced by quenching free aldehyde groups with 50 mM NH4Cl in PBS, pH
7.4, two times for 15 min each. Permeabilization was achieved with PBS
containing 0.5% Triton X-100 and 20% horse serum for 1 hr at room
temperature. Adrenal slices were then incubated with the primary
antibodies to trans-Golgi network 38 (TGN38) (1/100; Transduction
Laboratories product; Interchim, Montluçon, France)
or -tubulin (1/2000; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) for 48 hr at
4°C in PBS plus 0.1% Triton X-100 plus 20% horse serum. The slices were washed three times for 10 min in PBS and incubated with the
secondary antibody (1/1000 Cy3-conjugated mouse IgG; Jackson product;
Interchim) for 2 hr at room temperature in PBS plus 0.1%
Triton X-100 plus 20% horse serum. Slices were washed three times for
10 min with PBS and mounted on glass coverslips in Mowiol.
1,4-diazobicyclo-[2.2.2]-octane (2.5%; Sigma) was added to the mounting medium to reduce fading. Immunolabeling without primary
antibody was used as a control. Slices were imaged with the Odyssey XL
(Noran Instruments Inc.) laser confocal microscope. The
568 nm line of the laser beam was selected, and the emitted fluorescence was collected through the 590 nm barrier filter (low-pass filter). Cells were viewed with a 100 × 1.3 NA plan-neofluar oil immersion objective (Zeiss). For image acquisition, the 25 µm detection slit of the confocal microscope was used, giving bright images with a 0.7 µm z-axis resolution. Optical slices of
the chromaffin cells were recorded using the normal scan mode (30 images per second, averaging 256 frames) with an image size of 308 × 239 pixels and a 400 nsec dwell rate per pixel. To improve the
resolution of confocal images, extraction of unblurred images was
performed by a two-dimensional blind deconvolution
(deconvolution module of the InterVision software package).
Solutions and chemicals. The nicotinic receptor blockers
hexamethonium (Sigma), F3, and -bungarotoxin ( -Bgt;
Sigma) were bath-applied (5 min before testing their
effects on spontaneous EPSCs and 30 min before dye spread experiments).
The oxystilbene derivative F3 compound was synthetized in Dr. Francesco
Clementi's laboratory (Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche,
Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology Center, University of Milan, Milan,
Italy) and was first reported to be a selective ligand for neuronal
nicotinic -bungarotoxin-sensitive receptors (Gotti et al., 1998 ).
LY, the gap junction blocker carbenoxolone, and the nonselective P2
purinergic receptor antagonists were purchased from Sigma.
Brefeldin A (BFA) (2 µg/ml; purchased from Fluka,
L'isle d'Abeau Chesnes, France) and nocodazole (25 µM; obtained from Tebu-France, Le
Perray en Yveline, France) were used to inhibit the Golgi apparatus
(Dinter and Berger, 1998 ). To fully disrupt the Golgi complex and
microtubules, adrenal slices were treated either with BFA or with
nocodazole for at least 30 min at 37°C before and during incubation
in hexamethonium-containing saline.
Statistics. Numerical data are expressed as means ± SEM. The Student's t test was used to compare means when
appropriate. Differences between groups were assessed by using the
nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test. Percentages were
compared using a contingency table and the
2 test. Differences of
p < 0.01 were considered significant.
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Results |
As reported recently, the presence of gap junctions between
chromaffin cells can be accurately determined by examining the diffusion of the low-molecular-weight fluorescent dye Lucifer yellow
(Martin et al., 2001 ). This approach was used here to study the gap
junction-mediated intercellular coupling between chromaffin cells under
various experimental conditions, in which the level of synaptic
transmission at the splanchnic nerve terminals was manipulated.
Increase in gap junctional communication between chromaffin cells
after acute impairment of synaptic excitatory cholinergic
transmission
When chromaffin cells were voltage-clamped at 80 mV, spontaneous
inward synaptic currents were observed that are likely to reflect
acetylcholine release from the presynaptic terminals contacting chromaffin cells (Barbara and Takeda, 1996 ). In control saline (2.5 mM K+), 12% of chromaffin
cells exhibited spontaneous EPSCs when recorded over 10 min
(n = 75 cells) (Fig.
1Aa-c, left traces).
The mean EPSC amplitude and frequency were 89.6 ± 5.6 pA
(n = 252 EPSCs, nine cells) and 0.08 ± 0.04 Hz
(n = 9 cells) (range, 0.001-0.34 Hz), respectively. It
has been reported previously that inward synaptic currents are mediated
by the activation of neuronal-like postsynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine
receptors (nAChRs) (Barbara and Takeda, 1996 ). Because the 3
subunit-containing nAChRs represent the major subtype transducing the
ACh-evoked postsynaptic electrical response in chromaffin cells (Nooney
and Feltz, 1995 ), we tested the effect of hexamethonium, which
specifically targets this receptor subtype. Bath-application of
hexamethonium (200 µM) significantly reduced
the amplitude and frequency of spontaneous EPSCs (Fig. 1Aa, right trace and histograms). The percentage of
inhibition of both EPSC frequency and amplitude was 41.4 ± 10.6 and 56.6 ± 10.5%, respectively (n = 8 cells
recorded before and in the presence of hexamethonium). These effects
were partly reversible within 10-20 min (data not shown). The
frequency of spontaneous EPSCs was also significantly decreased in the
presence of the oxystilbene derivative F3 (30 nM,
bath-application) (Fig. 1Ab, right trace), a compound
recently reported to antagonize 3 subunit-containing nAChRs in the
rat adrenal gland (Di Angelantonio et al., 2000 ). No significant effect
on the amplitude of the remaining EPSCs was observed (n = 10). The effect of F3 was reversible within several minutes (data not
shown). Because both hexamethonium and F3 did not fully inhibit
spontaneous EPSCs, and because rat adrenomedullary chromaffin cells
also express the 7 subunit-containing AChRs (Rust et al., 1994 ;
Criado et al., 1997 ; Mousavi et al., 2001 ), the snake neurotoxin
-bungarotoxin, an irreversible antagonist of 7 nAChRs (Sine,
1997 ), was tested. As illustrated in Figure 1Ac,
-Bgt (1.5 µM) significantly decreased EPSC
frequency (p < 0.01; n = 4).
These results indicate that hexamethonium, F3, and -Bgt efficiently
reduce excitatory cholinergic synaptic transmission between presynaptic
nerve terminals and chromaffin cells.

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Figure 1.
Acute impairment of synaptic activity-induced
upregulation of LY diffusion between chromaffin cells. A,
a-c, Spontaneous EPSCs recorded in chromaffin cells
voltage-clamped at 80 mV in normal saline (2.5 mM
external K+) (left traces) and in the presence of
three bath-applied nAChR blockers, hexamethonium (200 µM), the oxystilbene derivative F3 (150 nM),
and -bungarotoxin (1.5 µM) (right traces). The
histograms summarize the effects of the blockers on EPSC frequency and
amplitude. *p < 0.01 compared with control values.
B, Histograms illustrating the increase in the
probability of LY diffusion between chromaffin cells in slices treated
with nAChR blockers. The number of recorded cells for each experimental
condition is indicated in parentheses. *p < 0.01 compared with control values. C, Example of widespread
LY diffusion within a cell cluster in a F3-treated slice. TL,
Transmitted light image. Five neighboring chromaffin cells in the same
optical plane were labeled with LY after dye injection into the cell
1*.
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To investigate possible signaling interactions between synaptic
transmission and gap junction-mediated intercellular coupling, we next
studied the effects of applying hexamethonium, F3, or -Bgt for
10-30 min on LY diffusion between chromaffin cells. As shown in Figure
1B, the probability of observing LY diffusion between
nearby chromaffin cells was significantly increased when slices were
incubated with nAChR blockers (0.74, 0.67, and 0.70 for hexamethonium,
F3, and -Bgt, respectively, vs 0.44 in control slices;
p < 0.01). Incubation in a medium containing a
combination of hexamethonium and -Bgt did not significantly increase
the probability of dye coupling between chromaffin cells compared with
the effect of either blocker alone (Fig. 1B). In the
presence of nAChR antagonists, LY-labeled cell clusters (more than or
equal to three cells) were observed more frequently (21.1% in
hexamethonium-treated slices vs 2.4% in control slices). An example of
prominent dye coupling in an F3-bathed slice is illustrated in Figure
1C.
Could this upregulation of dye coupling be mimicked by other
synaptically released excitatory factors? Acetylcholine and ATP are
stored together in some synaptic vesicles, including those in
sympathetic splanchnic nerve terminals (Zimmermann, 1994 ). We therefore
investigated the effect of blocking postsynaptic purinergic receptors
in chromaffin cells on the spreading of LY. Thirty minutes of
incubation in the presence of 100 µM suramin, a
nonselective blocker of P2 purinergic receptors, modified neither the
incidence of dye coupling (p = 0.44;
n = 16, data not shown) when compared with control
slices (0.44) nor the extent of coupling (data not shown). To further
investigate the role of potential non-nicotinic purinergic EPSCs,
slices were exposed to suramin (100 µM),
hexamethonium (200 µM), and -Bgt (1.5 µM) for at least 30 min before LY injections.
Dye coupling to adjacent chromaffin cells was observed in 73.7% of the
injected cells (n = 19). This was similar to the
percentage found with saline-containing nAChR antagonists
(p > 0.01). This result indicates that the
increase in gap junctional coupling is mediated by a specific pathway
involving postsynaptic nAChRs and is of interest when considering that
acetylcholine is the main synaptically released transmitter that
stimulates catecholamine exocytosis in chromaffin cells.
To confirm that the increase in dye coupling reflects increased
functional communication between chromaffin cells,
depolarization-evoked action potentials were triggered in a
single chromaffin cell, and subsequent
[Ca2+]i signals
were simultaneously monitored in neighboring cells in
hexamethonium-treated slices (Fig.
2A). As reported
previously (Martin et al., 2001 ), this paradigm led to propagated
electrically triggered
[Ca2+]i rises
between gap junction-coupled cells. As a result, synchronous multiple
[Ca2+]i rises were
frequently observed in neighboring cells (68.7% of cell fields;
n = 22 of 32) (Fig. 2B) in the
presence of hexamethonium. In untreated slices, the percentage dropped
to 48.1% (n = 13 of 27), as shown previously (Martin
et al., 2001 ). In addition, the number of neighboring cells in which
the [Ca2+]i rose
in response to a single cell depolarization was higher in
hexamethonium-containing saline than under control conditions. These
data are in agreement with those reported in Figure 1.

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Figure 2.
Propagation of action potential-induced
[Ca2+]i rises between chromaffin cells
in hexamethonium-containing saline. A, Electrical
activity-driven multicellular [Ca2+]i
increases were visualized by real-time scanning laser confocal imaging
(120 images per second, averaging 4 frames) in five chromaffin cells
loaded with Oregon Green 488 BAPTA-1 as the
Ca2+-sensitive fluorescent probe. The adrenal slice
was continuously perfused with 200 µM hexamethonium (for
at least 30 min before recording). The plots of relative Oregon Green
488 BAPTA-1 emission changes show a
[Ca2+]i rise in either the stimulated
cell (1*, burst of action potentials triggered by an injection of a 500 msec depolarizing current) or three nearby cells (cells 2-4). Note
that cell 5 remained silent. Dotted lines indicate the baseline.
B, Histogram illustrating the percentage of cell fields
in which the [Ca2+]i rise was
propagated to adjacent cells in control and hexamethonium-treated
slices. *p < 0.01 compared with control.
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All of these results show that reduced excitatory cholinergic synaptic
activity resulting in a decrease in postsynaptic nAChR activation
rapidly (in <1 hr) upregulates gap junctional coupling between
chromaffin cells.
Electrical coupling and gap junction currents between chromaffin
cells in hexamethonium-treated slices: increased incidence of highly
electrically coupled cells
What is the mechanism underlying the short-term increase in gap
junction-mediated coupling between chromaffin cells in the presence of
nAChR antagonists? To address this issue, membrane potentials were
recorded from chromaffin cell pairs using the dual patch-clamp
technique. In 68.2% of cell pairs (n = 15 of 22), the
voltage changes in response to hyperpolarizing/depolarizing current
injected into the stimulated cell were reflected as variably attenuated
responses in the unstepped cell (Fig.
3A,B, left traces) and vice
versa (right traces). In 80% of coupled pairs, an action potential in
the injected cell induced only a small depolarization in the
neighboring cell (Fig. 3A), indicating weak coupling,
whereas in the remaining pairs, robust coupling led to the transmission of suprathreshold responses, resulting in action potentials (Fig. 3B). Consequently, the coupling ratios exhibited a wide
distribution range of 0.01-0.96 (mean, 0.24 ± 0.09;
n = 15 coupled pairs) (Fig. 3C) that
appeared to be bimodal. This reflects the presence of two chromaffin
cell populations, a weakly coupled cell population, and a highly
coupled cell population. It is interesting to note that the value of
the coupling ratio for a given cell pair remained constant independent
of the amplitude or polarity of the current step. These findings were
confirmed in Cs+-loaded chromaffin cell
pairs voltage-clamped at 60 mV. Junctional currents were recorded in
64.7% (11 of 17) of the cell pairs (Fig. 4), a value similar to that found in
control slices [61% (Martin et al., 2001 )] (p > 0.01). Delivering voltage steps with command pulses of both
polarities induced macroscopic junctional currents (Ij) in the unstepped cell that
appeared to remain constant for the duration of the step, but again
exhibiting variable degrees of attenuation. In 56.5% of recorded pairs
(n = 6), Ij amplitude did not exceed several picoamperes (Fig. 4A), whereas
in 45.5% of cell pairs (n = 5),
Ij could reach 1-2 nA (Fig.
4B). When plotted as a function of the
transjunctional potential, the I-V curve of
Ij displayed a linear relationship
within the membrane potential range of 200 to +150 mV. The curve used
to fit the data was derived from a linear regression, given a mean
macroscopic conductance of ~42 pS (n = 6) for the
weak coupling and ~12 nS (n = 5) for the robust
coupling (Fig. 4C). Compared with our previous study (Martin
et al., 2001 ), the main effect of hexamethonium was to significantly
increase the incidence of highly electrically coupled cells. Indeed, a
robust Ij was observed less frequently
under control conditions (20 vs 45% in control and
hexamethonium-treated slices, respectively) (p < 0.01) (Fig. 4D,E).

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Figure 3.
Electrical coupling between chromaffin cell pairs
in hexamethonium-containing extracellular medium. Membrane potential
was 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 cell 1 resulted in small membrane
depolarizations in cell 2 (left traces) and vice versa (right traces).
The two cells were current-clamped at 65 mV. B,
Example of a cell pair in which action potentials were transmitted to
the nonstimulated cell. The two cells were current-clamped at 68 mV.
C, Histograms illustrating the wide distribution range
of the coupling ratio calculated in 22 chromaffin cell pairs (7 noncoupled pairs and 15 coupled pairs) from current-clamp measurements
of voltage amplitude in response to a hyperpolarizing current injection
in cell 1 (stepped cell) and cell 2 (target cell) (from 0 for
noncoupled pairs to 1 for highly coupled pairs).
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Figure 4.
Macroscopic junctional currents
Ij between chromaffin cell pairs in
hexamethonium-containing saline. Junctional currents
(Ij) were measured in
Cs+-loaded (140 mM
Cs+-gluconate) cell pairs voltage-clamped at 60 mV
(transjunctional potential from 120 to +60 mV; 150 msec duration).
A, Example of a low Ij
amplitude indicating weak coupling (macroscopic junctional conductance,
Gj = 50 pS, as calculated from the
slope of the I-V curve). B, Robust
electrical coupling evidenced by high Ij
amplitude (Gj = 6.6 nS).
C, I-V relationships from pooled data of
six and five cell pairs exhibiting weak and robust coupling,
respectively. The linear regression used to fit the data (dotted line)
was y = 0.042x 0.41 (r2 = 0.94) for the weak
coupling and y = 12.4x 6.37 (r2 = 0.99) for the
robust coupling, given a Gj of 42 pS and
12.4 nS, respectively. D, Pooled data of
Gj calculated in five cell pairs bathed in
control saline and 11 pairs in hexamethonium-containing saline
(logarithmic scale on y-axis). The determination of
Gj in control medium includes data from
Martin et al. (2001) . E, Percentage of appearance of
weak and robust coupling and control (ctrl) and hexamethonium
(hex)-treated slices.
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Effects of inhibiting connexon trafficking to the plasma membrane
by disrupting the trans-Golgi network and microtubules
We also examined possible mechanisms that could underlie the
increase in macroscopic Ij
conductance. Based on the fact that the effects of nAChR antagonists
occurred within 30 min, we first tested the hypothesis of a protein
trafficking-mediated effect by manipulating intracellular connexon
trafficking. As shown recently (Lauf et al., 2002 ), newly synthesized
connexons are transported from the Golgi apparatus to the plasma
membrane via vesicular transport along microtubules. Because the
TGN is involved in the sorting and targeting of proteins to the
plasma membrane, we first attempted to inhibit membrane insertion of
new connexons by disrupting the TGN. This was achieved by treating the
adrenal slices for at least 30 min (at 37°C) before and during nAChR
antagonist treatment with BFA (2 µg/ml), an inhibitor of vesicular
export from the TGN. BFA has been reported to disassemble the Golgi
apparatus into tubules by inhibiting the guanine nucleotide exchange on ADP-ribosylating factors (Helms and Rothman, 1992 ; Klausner et al.,
1992 ). Golgi disruption was verified by immunolabeling of TGN38, a
transmembrane glycoprotein predominantly localized to the TGN (Luzio et
al., 1990 ). As illustrated in Figure
5Aa, in BFA-treated slices,
TGN38 appeared homogeneously distributed within the cytosol, whereas it
showed the expected perinuclear localization in untreated slices. Under
these experimental conditions, the increase in the probability of dye
coupling in the presence of hexamethonium was abolished and was not
significantly different from that found in control slices
(p > 0.01; 0.41 vs 0.44 for BFA-treated and
control slices, respectively) (Fig. 5B) (n = 39). This result was also confirmed in slices treated with the potent microtubule depolymerizing agent nocodazole (25 µM, at least 30 min at 37°C before incubation
in hexamethonium). As expected, nocodazole treatment strongly disrupted
the microtubule network visualized by the immunofluorescent detection
of -tubulin protein (Fig. 5Ab). Similarly to what we
found in BFA-treated slices, the probability of observing LY coupling
in the presence of hexamethonium dropped to control conditions
(p > 0.01; 0.44 for nocodazole-treated and
control slices) (Fig. 5B) (n = 29). Note
that BFA or nocodazole treatment did not modify per se either the
resting membrane potential or the ability of chromaffin cells to
exhibit spontaneous or electrically evoked action potentials (data not
shown).

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Figure 5.
Effect of inhibiting connexon delivery to the
plasma membrane on the increase in gap junctional coupling in
hexamethonium-treated slices. Connexon trafficking from the Golgi
apparatus to the plasma membrane was abolished by treating slices with
either BFA (2 µg/ml) or the cytoskeletal disrupting agent nocodazole
(25 µM) for at least 30 min before adding 200 µM hexamethonium. A, a, Immunofluorescent
labeling of the TGN using an antibody directed against TGN38. As
expected, the labeling appeared as a fluorescent crescent near
the nucleus (inset: scale bar, 5 µm) in untreated slices, whereas the
Golgi network was dramatically disorganized in BFA-treated slices.
A, b, Microtubules were immunolabeled with an antibody
directed against -tubulin. Nocodazole treatment strongly disrupted
the cytoskeleton, as seen by the absence of -tubulin detection.
B, Pooled data showing that treatment with either BFA or
nocodazole abolished the increase in LY spreading in
hexamethonium-containing medium. *p < 0.01 compared with control.
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|
Together, these results indicate that connexon trafficking from the
trans-Golgi network to the plasma membrane is a likely mechanism
mediating the effects of hexamethonium on gap junctional coupling
between chromaffin cells.
Gap junctional coupling is modulated by the functional state of
synaptic transmission: the physiological significance in newborn
rats
At birth, the innervation of chromaffin cells by splanchnic nerve
fibers is not fully mature (Millar and Unsicker, 1981 ), although the
majority, if not all, of the presynaptic and postsynaptic components
are already present prenatally (Daikoku et al., 1977 ; Tomlinson and
Coupland, 1990 ). Spontaneous synaptic activity was recorded in adrenal
slices from newborn rats. In neonates, ~22% of recorded cells
spontaneously exhibited EPSCs (Fig.
6A) (n = 23). The mean EPSC amplitude was 35.7 ± 3.2 pA
(n = 59, five cells), and the frequency was 0.02 ± 0.01 Hz (n = 5). With respect to LY coupling, the
probability of observing dye spreading between chromaffin cells was
significantly higher in neonates than in adults (~0.6 vs ~0.4,
respectively; p < 0.01) (Fig. 6B).
LY coupling was indeed mediated by gap junctions, as shown by the
dramatic reduction in LY diffusion in the presence of carbenoxolone
(200 µM, 10-60 min) (Fig.
6B), a decoupling agent (Ishimatsu and Williams, 1996 ). The spatial extent of LY staining was also higher in neonates compared with adult rats. After injecting dye into a single cell, up to
four to five adjacent cells were labeled, whereas coupling was confined
to one to two cells in adults (Fig. 6C).

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Figure 6.
Greater gap junction-mediated intercellular
communication between chromaffin cells in neonates. A,
Chart recording of spontaneous excitatory synaptic activity in
chromaffin cells in neonates. B, Increased probability
of LY diffusion in neonates compared with adults
(*p < 0.01). C, Increase in the
extent of coupling in neonates compared with adults. C,
a, Examples of in situ LY diffusion between
chromaffin cells in adults (2 cells) and in neonates (up to 5 cells in
the same optical plane). 1* represents the patched cell. C,
b, pooled data.
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What might the physiological significance be for gap junction-mediated
coupling in neonates? We reported previously that gap junctions are
involved in cell-to-cell propagation of electrical events and
subsequent [Ca2+]i
increases in the adrenal medulla of adult rats (Martin et al., 2001 ).
To address the role of gap junctions in the intercellular transfer of
biological signals in neonates, multicellular
[Ca2+]i changes
were monitored with real-time confocal microscopy in Oregon Green 4800 BAPTA-1-loaded chromaffin cells. As illustrated in Figure
7, the triggering of an action potential
resulted in a
[Ca2+]i rise in
the stimulated cell and in several adjacent cells (up to five cells in
the same optical plane). Such a simultaneous [Ca2+]i increase
in neighboring chromaffin cells in response to depolarization-evoked action potentials was observed in 62.5% of recorded cell fields (n = 10 of 16), a percentage significantly higher in
neonates than in adults (p < 0.01) (Martin et
al., 2001 ). In addition, the number of cells in which
[Ca2+]i
simultaneously increased was higher in the neonate than in the adult.
This result is in agreement with the data illustrated in Figure
6C showing enhanced LY diffusion in neonates.

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Figure 7.
Propagation of electrical activity-linked
[Ca2+]i rise between chromaffin cells:
a functional role for gap junctions in neonates. A, An
acute adrenal slice from a neonatal rat was loaded with a
Ca2+-sensitive probe to simultaneously image
[Ca2+]i changes in multiple
neighboring chromaffin cells. The plots of relative Oregon Green 488 BAPTA-1 emission changes show a
[Ca2+]i rise in either the stimulated
cell (1*, action potential triggered by an injection of a 500 msec
depolarizing current) or in several nearby cells (cells 2-6).
Dotted lines indicate the baseline. B, Histogram
illustrating the percentage of cell fields in which the
[Ca2+]i rise was propagated to
adjacent cells in neonates and in adults.
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The propagation of action potential-induced
[Ca2+]i elevations
likely reflects a physiological phenomenon, because synchronized [Ca2+]i transients
spontaneously occurred between adjacent chromaffin cells in the absence
of stimulation (data not shown). Based on the kinetics of
[Ca2+]i transients
(i.e., a fast-peaking rising phase followed by a return to baseline
within a few seconds), we proposed that these [Ca2+]i transients are likely to reflect
Ca2+ entry through voltage-gated
Ca2+ channels opening during action potentials.
Long-lasting persistence of the upregulation of gap
junction-mediated intercellular coupling between chromaffin cells: a
study in splanchnectomized rats
To study the effects of chronic disruption of synaptic activity,
we monitored dye coupling in denervated adrenal glands after unilateral
lesion of the splanchnic nerve, which represents the preganglionic
input to the chromaffin cells. As shown in Figure 8A, synaptic
transmission was fully disrupted in the denervated medulla 2-4 weeks
after surgery, because no more spontaneous synaptic currents occurred
(Fig. 8A, middle trace) (n = 15 cells). Furthermore, increasing the external
K+ concentration to 20 mM to induce a Ca2+
rise in the nerve terminals had no effect on synaptic activity, thus
confirming the effectiveness of the denervation (data not shown). In
contrast, spontaneous EPSCs persisted in the contralateral adrenal
gland (Fig. 8A, bottom trace), and the percentage of
cells exhibiting synaptic events did not differ from that found in
unoperated animals (17.6 vs 12%, respectively; p > 0.01). However, the mean EPSC amplitude was 138.5 ± 9.6 pA
(n = 80, three cells) and was significantly higher when
compared with that found in unoperated rats (p < 0.01) (Fig. 8A, top trace) (n = 9 cells), although EPSC frequency was not altered [0.04 ± 0.02 Hz
(n = 3) for contralateral gland vs 0.08 ± 0.04 Hz
(n = 9) for unoperated animals; p > 0.01]. The probability of dye coupling in splanchnectomized rats was significantly higher in denervated glands (~0.7) compared with either
the contralateral gland (~0.4) or glands from unoperated rats
(~0.4) (Fig. 8B) (p < 0.01). In the denervated adrenal gland, the extent of LY diffusion from
the patched cell to a neighboring cell was also significantly increased
when compared with the contralateral innervated gland or the glands in
unoperated rats (Fig. 8C) (p < 0.01).

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Figure 8.
Effect of splanchnectomy on gap junctional
coupling in chromaffin cells. A, Spontaneous EPSCs
recorded in a control slice (top trace) and in a slice derived from a
denervated gland (middle trace) and a contralateral gland (bottom
trace). No synaptic activity was detected in the denervated tissue.
B, Probability of LY spreading between chromaffin cells
after a single cell injection. *p < 0.01 compared
with values in adults. The number of recorded cells is indicated in
parentheses. C, Extent of coupling estimated by the
number of LY-stained chromaffin cells. Note that the increase in gap
junction coupling in the denervated gland was accompanied by an
increase in the extent of coupling.
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Taken together, the data obtained from splanchnectomized animals
strengthen our hypothesis that synaptic activity tonically controls the
degree of gap junction-mediated intercellular communication between
chromaffin cells. This modulation, which is likely to involve multiple
mechanisms (see Discussion) takes place within 1 hr of disrupting
synaptic transmission and appears to persist for several weeks.
 |
Discussion |
We show here that the gap junction-mediated coupling between rat
adrenal chromaffin cells is dynamically regulated by the functional
state of excitatory nicotinic synaptic transmission. Experimental
conditions in which postsynaptic nAChRs are weakly stimulated or
blocked (acute pharmacological blockade of nAChRs, surgically induced
adrenal denervation, or immature nicotinic synaptic transmission in
neonates) lead to a significant increase in dye coupling between
chromaffin cells. This suggests that synaptic inputs, when cholinergic
transmission is normal or mature, exert a tonic inhibitory effect on
gap junction-mediated communication. Together, the present study
provides strong support for our previously proposed hypothesis,
according to which gap junction-mediated signaling and synaptic
transmission act in a coordinated manner to ensure normal cell function
(Martin et al., 2001 ).
The trafficking machinery as a possible mediator of upregulated gap
junctional coupling after blockade of nicotinic synaptic
transmission
Dye coupling experiments performed in the presence of bath-applied
nAChR antagonists show that the gap junction-dependent networks between
chromaffin cells rapidly respond (within 1 hr) to modifications in
nicotinic synaptic transmission efficiency. As revealed by the
recording of the junctional current
Ij, the enhanced dye coupling observed
in nAChR antagonist-containing saline is associated with an increase in
macroscopic gap junctional conductance
(Gj). We propose two hypotheses, which
are not mutually exclusive, to account for this finding: an increase in
the mean open probability of unitary gap junction channels and/or a
change in the number or composition of channels. Although we cannot
definitively rule out an effect on the open probability, our data with
BFA or nocodazole strongly implicate connexon trafficking or
scaffolding protein or connexon trafficking-associated regulatory
proteins (Giepmans and Moolenaar, 1998 ; Toyofuku et al., 1998 , 2001 ;
Barker et al., 2002 ) in the increased expression of gap junctions. The present study does not allow us to identify the intracellular components targeted by nAChR antagonists. Nevertheless, the following mechanisms can be considered. Connexon trafficking involves both their
delivery from the TGN to the plasma membrane and their
internalization/degradation via proteasomal and lysosomal pathways
(Lampe, 1994 ). The rapid insertion (within <1 hr) of existing
"nascent" connexons into the chromaffin cell membrane seems
plausible, given that the delivery of newly synthetized connexons from
the Golgi complex to the plasma membrane can occur within 2 hr (Lauf et
al., 2002 ).
This delivery step, which, as shown for connexin 43 (Cx43)
(Giepmans et al., 2001 ), depends on a direct interaction with the microtubules, may be a target for modulation by nicotinic receptor signaling. Our results with nocodazole would be consistent with such an
effect on microtubule function. Because gap junctions are constantly
being renewed and rapidly turned over (Fallon and Goodenough, 1981 ;
Laird, 1996 ), gap junction assembly at the plasma membrane may be
subject to regulation at the level of connexin turnover (Musil et al.,
2000 ). Reduction in connexin cycling could therefore increase gap
junctional coupling by reducing endocytic traffic of connexins.
Alternatively, connexon assembly at the plasma membrane may be affected
by nicotinic receptor signaling. The assembly process is dynamically
regulated by connexin phosphorylation (Cooper and Lampe, 2002 ) as well
as by microtubules (Johnson et al., 2002 ) and by adhesion molecules
such as -catenin (Govindarajan et al., 2002 ). An additional
mechanism to account for the increase in gap junctional conductance may
be a change in the subunit composition of the connexons. Such a
remodeling would imply that new connexins with a high unitary
conductance would preferentially replace existing connexins. A good
candidate for a high-conductance connexin would be Cx43, which is
expressed in rat adrenal chromaffin cells (Martin et al., 2001 ).
Because slices were bathed with nAChR antagonists for at least 30 min
before dye coupling experiments or Ij
measurement, very short-term effects of the blockers on the biophysical
properties of gap junction channels were not investigated. Recordings
of unitary electrical activity from gap junction channels would be required to definitively address this issue. Nevertheless, we cannot
exclude the possibility that intracellular second messengers (Ca2+ and downstream
Ca2+-dependent kinases or phosphatases)
may also affect the gating properties of gap junctions (Lampe and Lau,
2000 ).
Long-term persistence of changes in gap
junction-mediated communication
Our experiments on splanchnectomized rats indicate that
upregulation of gap junctional coupling can persist for as long as synaptic activity is impaired (at least 3 weeks in this study). This
result clearly shows that gap junctional coupling present in adults can
undergo both short-term changes, as reported previously, and long-term
changes. Such prolonged effects on gap junctional coupling are
consistent with a previous study showing that the re-establishment of
gap junctional coupling after injury can persist for many weeks (Chang
et al., 2000 ). In splanchnectomized animals, sustained changes in
sympathetic transmission may affect the level of mRNA encoding
connexins (or other proteins interacting with connexins), as reported
for tyrosine hydroxylase activity after chemical sympathectomy (Mueller
et al., 1969 ). Such a compensatory increase in connexin-encoded gene
activity could lead to long-term upregulation in the number of gap
junction plaques between chromaffin cells. Additional approaches,
including immunostaining and in situ hybridization in the
denervated adrenal gland, will be required to evaluate this hypothesis.
Alternatively, splanchnectomy may result in the modulation of connexin
assembly into functional channels and/or the modification of existing
gap junction plaques (Chang et al., 2000 ).
Roles of gap junctions between chromaffin cells in neonates: gap
junctions as relays before the establishment of functional synaptic
inputs
It is known that at birth, synaptic transmission between the
splanchnic nerve and chromaffin cells is not fully competent (Millar
and Unsicker, 1981 ; Slotkin, 1986 ), although presynaptic and
postsynaptic elements are already present prenatally (Daikoku et al.,
1977 ). From a functional point of view, we show here that the main
difference observed in neonatal tissue compared with adults was a
reduction in EPSC amplitude. Under the same experimental conditions,
gap junctional coupling was upregulated. Furthermore, we found that
action potential-induced
[Ca2+]i increases
imaged in multiple cells resulted in synchronized signal propagation
between nearby chromaffin cells, demonstrating that gap junctions are
functional. Because trans-synaptic transmission is not fully
functional at birth, other processes are likely to mediate
catecholamine release in neonatal rats. Intercellular communication
mechanisms between chromaffin cells within the medulla would be good
candidates. Although paracrine and/or endocrine interactions cannot be
definitively ruled out, our finding that altered synaptic activity
leads to an increase in gap junction coupling strongly suggests that
this mode of communication contributes to catecholamine release in
neonates. Gap junctions would thus act as a substitute for chemical
synaptic transmission, thereby compensating for reduced synaptic
activity. This hypothesis is consistent with the fact that gap
junction-coupled neuronal assemblies often precede synaptically
connected networks (Kandler, 1997 ), and that the expression of gap
junctions gradually decreases during postnatal development, coinciding
with the establishment of functional synapses (Personius and
Balice-Gordon, 2001 ; Mentis et al., 2002 ).
Functional significance of an interaction between synaptic
transmission and gap junction coupling in the adrenal medulla
This study strengthens our view that a prominent interplay between
cholinergic synaptic activity and gap junctional coupling is necessary
for normal function of the rat adrenal medulla. Coordination of
cellular responses is crucial in maintaining syncytial function in
various tissues. The innervation density, the frequency of stimulation,
and the extent of intercellular coupling are among the parameters that
must be integrated for normal activity, as modeled recently (Ramanan et
al., 1998 ). Finally, we propose that the modulation of gap junction
coupling is important under pathological conditions in which synaptic
transmission is reduced. By compensating for the loss in chemical
neurotransmission, gap junction signaling could sustain catecholamine
release by maintaining communication within the chromaffin cell network.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Dec. 23, 2002; revised Feb. 12, 2003; accepted Feb. 18, 2003.
This work was supported by grants from the 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 thank Drs. U. Gerber and
P. Mollard for critical reading of this manuscript and M. Passama, A. Carrette, and D. Haddou for their excellent technical assistance. We
thank Dr. C. Gotti for kindly providing the F3 compound.
Correspondence should be addressed to Nathalie C. Guérineau, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche
Médicale (INSERM) Unité 469, Centre National de la
Recherche Scientifique/INSERM de Pharmacologie et
d'Endocrinologie, 141 rue de la Cardonille, 34094 Montpellier
Cedex 5, France. E-mail: nathalie.guerineau{at}ccipe.cnrs.fr.
 |
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