“…In contrast, connexin channels have been largely implicated in a variety of functions (159,227,345,504,506,509), including embryonic development, morphogenesis, and cell differentiation, as well as in the control of adult cell proliferation and migration, the functioning of muscle cells, hormonal transmission, electrical and mechanical synchronization, resistance to cytotoxic agents, compensation of enzymatic defects, transmission of trophic or deadly molecules, and secretion under both normal and pathological conditions (14, 53-55, 92, 110, 167, 507, 509). Whereas several of these functions have been attributed to connexins solely on the basis of circumstantial, correlative studies, a number of others have been documented after careful interference with selective connexins.…”