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Structural determinants of CO2-sensitivity in the β connexin family suggested by evolutionary analysis.

Valentin-Mihai DospinescuSarbjit NijjarFokion SpanosJonathan CookElizabeth de WolfMaria Assunta BiscottiMarco GerdolNicholas Dale
Published in: Communications biology (2019)
A subclade of connexins comprising Cx26, Cx30, and Cx32 are directly sensitive to CO2. CO2 binds to a carbamylation motif present in these connexins and causes their hemichannels to open. Cx26 may contribute to CO2-dependent regulation of breathing in mammals. Here, we show that the carbamylation motif occurs in a wide range of non-mammalian vertebrates and was likely present in the ancestor of all gnathostomes. While the carbamylation motif is essential for connexin CO2-sensitivity, it is not sufficient. In Cx26 of amphibia and lungfish, an extended C-terminal tail prevents CO2-evoked hemichannel opening despite the presence of the motif. Although Cx32 has a long C-terminal tail, Cx32 hemichannels open to CO2 because the tail is conformationally restricted by the presence of proline residues. The loss of the C-terminal tail of Cx26 in amniotes was an evolutionary innovation that created a connexin hemichannel with CO2-sensing properties suitable for the regulation of breathing.
Keyphrases
  • minimally invasive
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • mouse model
  • data analysis