2015
DOI: 10.1002/cne.23779
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Connexin50 couples axon terminals of mouse horizontal cells by homotypic gap junctions

Abstract: Horizontal cells in the mouse retina are of the axon-bearing B-type and contribute to the gain control of photoreceptors and to the center-surround organization of bipolar cells by providing feedback and feedforward signals to photoreceptors and bipolar cells, respectively. Horizontal cells form two independent networks, coupled by dendro-dendritic and axo-axonal gap junctions composed of connexin57 (Cx57). In Cx57-deficient mice, occasionally the residual tracer coupling of horizontal cell somata was observed… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Similarly, retinal morphology of Cx57 +/lacZ heterozygotes and Cx57 lacZ/lacZ nulls was reported to be normal ( Shelley et al, 2006 ; Janssen-Bienhold et al, 2009 ), as was the synaptic morphology between photoreceptors and horizontal cells ( Shelley et al, 2006 ). Recently, another connexin isoform (Cx50), which couples axon terminals of mouse horizontal cells, was reported ( Dorgau et al, 2015 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, retinal morphology of Cx57 +/lacZ heterozygotes and Cx57 lacZ/lacZ nulls was reported to be normal ( Shelley et al, 2006 ; Janssen-Bienhold et al, 2009 ), as was the synaptic morphology between photoreceptors and horizontal cells ( Shelley et al, 2006 ). Recently, another connexin isoform (Cx50), which couples axon terminals of mouse horizontal cells, was reported ( Dorgau et al, 2015 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, a growing number of other connexins has been found to be expressed in limited sets of neurons, particularly in the retina. Among these, Cx50 (Gja8) has been found in axonless horizontal cells in rabbit retina (O'Brien et al, ), where it supports the most extensive coupling of any retinal network, and at a low expression level in mouse horizontal cells (Dorgau et al, ). Thus, it is not entirely surprising that we have found zebrafish Cx79.8 expressed in retinal neurons and in neurons elsewhere in the CNS.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These cells do not use Cx35/Cx36 (Deans and Paul, ), but rather several other connexins. Zebrafish horizontal cells have been found to express Cx55.5, Cx52.6 and Cx52.9 (Dermietzel et al, ; Zoidl et al, ; Klaassen et al, ) while mammalian horizontal cells use Cx57 (Hombach et al, ; Pan et al, ), a homologue of Cx52.6, and Cx50 (O'Brien et al, ; Dorgau et al, ). These connexins show much larger single channel conductances of 39–57 pS for Cx52.6, Cx55.5, and Cx57 (Dermietzel et al, ; Zoidl et al, ; Palacios‐Prado et al, ), and over 200 pS for Cx50 (Srinivas et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They form GJs of both the primary and secondary rod pathways (Feigenspan et al, 2001, 2004; Güldenagel et al, 2001; Mills et al, 2001; Deans et al, 2002; Lee et al, 2003; Han and Massey, 2005; Lin et al, 2005; Maxeiner et al, 2005) and also ganglion-to-ganglion (GC-to-GC) and ganglion-to-amacrine cell (GC-to-AC) GJs (Hidaka et al, 2004; Schubert et al, 2005a,b; Völgyi et al, 2005, 2009, 2013a,b). In contrast, the high permeable Cx50 and Cx57 GJs connect horizontal cells to maintain an outer retinal syncytium (Hombach et al, 2004; Janssen-Bienhold et al, 2009; Dorgau et al, 2015; Bolte et al, 2016). While functions that GJs play in the retina seem conservative across vertebrate species (Völgyi et al, 2013a), the core of our knowledge stems from only a handful of popular species including the mouse, rat, rabbit, and monkey.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%