Spatiotemporal relation between gap junctions and fascia adherens junctions during postnatal development of human ventricular myocardium. 1994

N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
Department of Cardiac Medicine, National Heart & Lung Institute, London, England.

BACKGROUND The growing postnatal human heart maintains electromechanical function while undergoing substantial changes of cellular topology and myocardial architecture. The capacity for growth and remodeling of ventricular myocardium in adaptation to the hemodynamic changes of early infancy later declines. This decline is associated with changes in electromechanical properties of the myocardium, which suggest that the electrical and mechanical interactions between the myocytes may change in an age-dependent manner. Thus, reduction in the capacity for myocardial growth and adaptability may relate to age-dependent alterations in the patterns of the intercellular junctions that mediate electrical and mechanical coupling. We therefore examined the hypotheses that (1) age-dependent changes in the distribution patterns of gap junctions and fasciae adherentes, the intercellular junctions responsible, respectively, for electrical and mechanical coupling, accompany postnatal development in the human heart and that (2) such changes continue into the first few years of childhood. Further, the spatial relation between the two types of junction, for which a close association has been hypothesized as necessary, was explored. RESULTS Ventricular myocardial gap-junction distribution was investigated in 23 pediatric surgical patients (4 weeks to 15 years old) by quantitative immunohistochemical localization of the principal cardiac gap-junctional protein, connexin43, using confocal microscopy. Immunolocalization of fascia adherens junctions by labeling N-cadherin, and correlative immunogold and standard electron microscopy, were performed in parallel. In the neonate, connexin43 gap junctions have a punctate distribution over the entire surface of the ventricular myocytes. With advancing age, gap junctions become progressively confined to the transverse terminals of the cell, ie, toward the distribution within the intercalated disk characteristic of the adult ventricle. The transversely arrayed proportion of gap-junctional label showed a linear increase with age (R = .88, P < .001), reaching the adult pattern at about 6 years, and the fascia adherens junctions showed a similar progression. Electron microscopy confirmed the changing pattern of junctional contacts and demonstrated that initially gap junctions and adhering junctions are frequently not closely adjacent but become increasingly so with maturation of the intercalated disk. CONCLUSIONS Changes in the spatiotemporal patterns of the intercellular junctions responsible for electrical and mechanical coupling are closely coordinated in postnatal human ventricular myocardium and continue to about 6 years of age. Over this period there is a close and increasing association between the gap junctions and fascia adherens junctions. These changes in the distribution of intercellular electrical and adhering junctions may parallel the changing functional requirements of the ventricle, from a distribution that facilitates the remodeling necessitated by rapid growth and changing hemodynamics to that of the relatively stable and rapidly conducting adult myocardium. These age-related changes may also diminish the ability for appropriate myocardial remodeling in response to physiological, pathological, or surgical hemodynamic alterations.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007223 Infant A child between 1 and 23 months of age. Infants
D007365 Intercellular Junctions Direct contact of a cell with a neighboring cell. Most such junctions are too small to be resolved by light microscopy, but they can be visualized by conventional or freeze-fracture electron microscopy, both of which show that the interacting CELL MEMBRANE and often the underlying CYTOPLASM and the intervening EXTRACELLULAR SPACE are highly specialized in these regions. (From Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2d ed, p792) Cell Junctions,Cell Junction,Intercellular Junction,Junction, Cell,Junction, Intercellular,Junctions, Cell,Junctions, Intercellular
D008854 Microscopy, Electron Microscopy using an electron beam, instead of light, to visualize the sample, thereby allowing much greater magnification. The interactions of ELECTRONS with specimens are used to provide information about the fine structure of that specimen. In TRANSMISSION ELECTRON MICROSCOPY the reactions of the electrons that are transmitted through the specimen are imaged. In SCANNING ELECTRON MICROSCOPY an electron beam falls at a non-normal angle on the specimen and the image is derived from the reactions occurring above the plane of the specimen. Electron Microscopy
D009206 Myocardium The muscle tissue of the HEART. It is composed of striated, involuntary muscle cells (MYOCYTES, CARDIAC) connected to form the contractile pump to generate blood flow. Muscle, Cardiac,Muscle, Heart,Cardiac Muscle,Myocardia,Cardiac Muscles,Heart Muscle,Heart Muscles,Muscles, Cardiac,Muscles, Heart
D002648 Child A person 6 to 12 years of age. An individual 2 to 5 years old is CHILD, PRESCHOOL. Children
D002675 Child, Preschool A child between the ages of 2 and 5. Children, Preschool,Preschool Child,Preschool Children
D006321 Heart The hollow, muscular organ that maintains the circulation of the blood. Hearts
D006330 Heart Defects, Congenital Developmental abnormalities involving structures of the heart. These defects are present at birth but may be discovered later in life. Congenital Heart Disease,Heart Abnormalities,Abnormality, Heart,Congenital Heart Defect,Congenital Heart Defects,Defects, Congenital Heart,Heart Defect, Congenital,Heart, Malformation Of,Congenital Heart Diseases,Defect, Congenital Heart,Disease, Congenital Heart,Heart Abnormality,Heart Disease, Congenital,Malformation Of Heart,Malformation Of Hearts
D006352 Heart Ventricles The lower right and left chambers of the heart. The right ventricle pumps venous BLOOD into the LUNGS and the left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood into the systemic arterial circulation. Cardiac Ventricle,Cardiac Ventricles,Heart Ventricle,Left Ventricle,Right Ventricle,Left Ventricles,Right Ventricles,Ventricle, Cardiac,Ventricle, Heart,Ventricle, Left,Ventricle, Right,Ventricles, Cardiac,Ventricles, Heart,Ventricles, Left,Ventricles, Right
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man

Related Publications

N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
January 1997, Circulation research,
N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
September 2017, Experimental cell research,
N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
April 1995, The American journal of physiology,
N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
January 2020, Frontiers in cell and developmental biology,
N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
January 2012, Sub-cellular biochemistry,
N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
January 2014, Microscopy research and technique,
N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
January 2012, Sub-cellular biochemistry,
N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
June 1980, Journal of ultrastructure research,
N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
October 2005, BJU international,
N S Peters, and N J Severs, and S M Rothery, and C Lincoln, and M H Yacoub, and C R Green
May 2015, The Journal of cell biology,
Copied contents to your clipboard!