Calmodulin Acts as an intermediary for the effects of calcium on gap junctions from crayfish lateral axons

Abstract
Lateral axons from the abdominal nerve cord of cray-fish were internally perfused with the calcium receptor calmodulin (CaM) in solutions with low (pCa>7.0) or high (pCa 5.5) calcium concentrations and studied electrophysiologically and morphologically. Results from these experiments show that when the internal solution contains calcium-activated calmodulin (Ca2+-CaM) the junctional resistance between the axons increases from control values of about 60 to 500–600 kΩ in 60 min. In contrast, axons perfused with calmodulin in low calcium solutions maintain their junctional resistance at control levels during the 60-min perfusion. Similar results are obtained when only one or both coupled axons are perfused. The morphological study shows that in the perfused axons the axoplasmic organelles are replaced or grossly perturbed by the perfusion solution up to the region of the synapses. Additionally, in axons perfused with Ca2+-CaM there are regions where the synaptic gap between the membranes decreases from a control 4–6 to 2–3 nm. Both electrophysiological and morphological results can be interpreted as indicating that calcium-activated calmodulin acts directly on the junctional channels to induce their closure.