Gap Junctions in the Brain: Hardwired but Functionally Versatile.
Rafael GutiérrezPublished in: The Neuroscientist : a review journal bringing neurobiology, neurology and psychiatry (2022)
Gap junctions between neurons of the brain are thought to be present in only certain cell types, and they mostly connect dendrites, somata, and axons. Synapses with gap junctions serve bidirectional metabolic and electrical coupling between connected neuronal compartments. Although plasticity of electrical synapses has been described, recent evidence of the presence of silent, but activatable, gap junctions suggests that electrical nodes in a neuronal circuit can be added or suppressed by changes in the synaptic microenvironment. This opens the possibility of reconfiguration of neuronal ensembles in response to activity. Moreover, the coexistence of gap junctions in a glutamatergic synapse may add electric and metabolic coupling to a neuronal aggregate and may serve to constitute primed ensembles within a higher-order neural network. The interaction of chemical with electrical synapses should be further explored to find, especially, emerging properties of neuronal ensembles. It will be worth to reexamine in a new light the "functional" implications of the "anatomic" concepts: "continuity" and "contiguity," which were championed by Golgi and Ramón y Cajal, respectively. In any case, exploring the versatility of the gap junctions will likely enrich the heuristic aspects of the neural and network postulates.