The area composita of adhering junctions connecting heart muscle cells of vertebrates. I. Molecular definition in intercalated disks of cardiomyocytes by …

WW Franke, CM Borrmann, C Grund… - European journal of cell …, 2006 - Elsevier
WW Franke, CM Borrmann, C Grund, S Pieperhoff
European journal of cell biology, 2006Elsevier
Among sarcomeric muscles the cardiac muscle cells are unique by, inter alia, a systemic
and extended cell–cell contact structure, the intercalated disk (ID), comprising frequent and
closely spaced arrays of plaque-coated cell–cell adhering junctions (AJs). As some of these
junctions may look somewhat like desmosomes and others like fasciae adhaerentes, the
dogma has emerged in the literature that IDs contain–like epithelial cells–both kinds of AJs
formed by–for the most–mutually exclusive molecular ensembles. This, however, is not the …
Among sarcomeric muscles the cardiac muscle cells are unique by, inter alia, a systemic and extended cell–cell contact structure, the intercalated disk (ID), comprising frequent and closely spaced arrays of plaque-coated cell–cell adhering junctions (AJs). As some of these junctions may look somewhat like desmosomes and others like fasciae adhaerentes, the dogma has emerged in the literature that IDs contain – like epithelial cells – both kinds of AJs formed by – for the most – mutually exclusive molecular ensembles. This, however, is not the case. In comprehensive immunoelectron microscopic studies of mammalian (human, bovine, rat, mouse) and non-mammalian (chicken, amphibia, fishes) heart muscle tissues, we have localized major constituents of the desmosomal plaques of polar epithelia, desmoplakin, plakophilin-2 and plakoglobin, as well as the desmosomal cadherins, desmoglein Dsg2 and desmocollin Dsc2, in both kinds of ID AJs, independent of the specific morphological appearance. The desmosomal molecules are not restricted to the desmosome-like-looking junctions but can also be detected in junctions appearing similar to the zonula or fascia adhaerens structures. These AJs of cardiac ID are therefore subsumed under the collective term area composita. We discuss our results with respect to the importance of ID junction molecules for the formation, maintenance and function of the heart, particularly in relation to recent findings that deletions of – or mutations in – genes encoding such proteins can cause severe, sometimes lethal damages.
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