Changes in gap‐junction permeability, phosphorylation, and number mediated by phorbol ester and non‐phorbol‐ester tumor promoters in rat liver epithelial cells
- 1 August 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Carcinogenesis
- Vol. 10 (4) , 226-236
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mc.2940100407
Abstract
The effects of three tumor promoters on gap-junction permeability; connexin 43 and 26 mRNA levels, protein levels, and phosphorylation; and the numbers of gap-junctional membrane plaques were studied in the rat liver epithelial cell line WB-F344 to determine whether changes in these parameters correlated with the inhibition of gap-junction function. 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA; 10 ng/mL), dieldrin (10 μg/mL), and heptachlor epoxide (10 μg/mL) inhibited gap-junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) assayed by fluorescent dye transfer by 80–90% after a 5-min exposure and by more than 90% within 1 h. Decreases in steady-state connexin 43 mRNA levels were detected by northern blot analysis within 1 h and paralleled changes in steady-state β-actin mRNA, but these changes did not occur rapidly enough to account for the rapid loss of gap-junction function. A substantial loss in the number of connexin 43 immunostained gap-junctional membrane plaques was detected after a 15-min exposure to all three promoters, but little change had occurred at 5 min. Western blot analyses using connexin 43-specific antibodies showed changes in the degree of connexin 43 phosphorylation for all three tumor promoters. TPA induced the appearance of a fourth connexin 43-im-munoreactive band (P3) and a concomitant decrease in the relative intensity of the unphosphorylated (P0) band within 5 min of treatment. P3, in addition to bands P1 and P2, disappeared after treatment with alkaline phosphatase. In contrast, dieldrin and heptachlor epoxide induced loss of P2 with a concomitant increase in the relative staining intensity of P0 within 1 h of exposure, but no changes were seen after 5 min. Connexin 43 phosphorylation levels recovered in parallel with the recovery of GJIC for all three tumor promoters. Connexin 26 mRNA levels showed little change after a 1-h exposure to the three promoters, but reductions in connexin 26 immunofluorescent staining were observed. These results suggest that (i) TPA-induced hyperphosphorylation of connexin 43 occurred fast enough to account for inhibition of GJIC, (ii) dieldrin and heptachlor epoxide modulated connexin phosphorylation in a manner different from TPA by promoting hypophosphorylation of connexin 43, (iii) redistribution of plasma membrane gap-junctional plaques after treatment with phorbol ester and non-phorbol-ester tumor promoters occurred subsequent to changes in gap-junction permeability, and (iv) changes in connexin mRNA levels could not account for the losses in fluorescent dye coupling induced by these promoters.Keywords
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