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Part of the book series: Subcellular Biochemistry ((SCBI,volume 102))

Abstract

Gap junctions, comprising connexin proteins, create conduits directly coupling the cytoplasms of adjacent cells. Expressed in essentially all tissues, dynamic gap junction structures enable the exchange of small molecules including ions and second messengers, and are central to maintenance of homeostasis and synchronized excitability. With such diverse and critical roles throughout the body, it is unsurprising that alterations to gap junction and/or connexin expression and function underlie a broad array of age-related pathologies. From neurological dysfunction to cardiac arrhythmia and bone loss, it is hard to identify a human disease state that does not involve reduced, or in some cases inappropriate, intercellular communication to affect organ function. With a complex life cycle encompassing several key regulatory steps, pathological gap junction remodeling during ageing can arise from alterations in gene expression, translation, intracellular trafficking, and posttranslational modification of connexins. Connexin proteins are now known to “moonlight” and perform a variety of non-junctional functions in the cell, independent of gap junctions. Furthermore, connexin “hemichannels” on the cell surface can communicate with the extracellular space without ever coupling to an adjacent cell to form a gap junction channel. This chapter will focus primarily on gap junctions in ageing, but such non-junctional connexin functions will be referred to where appropriate and the full spectrum of connexin biology should be noted as potentially causative/contributing to some findings in connexin knockout animals, for example.

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Correspondence to James W. Smyth .

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Zeitz, M.J., Smyth, J.W. (2023). Gap Junctions and Ageing. In: Harris, J.R., Korolchuk, V.I. (eds) Biochemistry and Cell Biology of Ageing: Part III Biomedical Science. Subcellular Biochemistry, vol 102. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-21410-3_6

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