Literature DB >> 16548142

The membrane, magnesium, mitosis (MMM) model of cell proliferation control.

H Rubin1.   

Abstract

The proliferation of cells in culture requires the presence of growth factors in the medium, provided either by serum or purified proteins. Cells are made quiescent by contact inhibition and sharply diminishing the concentration of growth factors overnight; they are then stimulated by restoring the original high concentration of the growth factors. The addition activates a coordinated group of biochemical responses within minutes, that is followed in 5-12 hr by the onset of DNA synthesis and then mitosis. The most critical of the early responses for the later onset of DNA synthesis is an increase in the rate of protein synthesis, which must be maintained by the continued presence of the growth factors throughout the G1 period. Lowering the Mg2+ concentration of the medium and therefore within the cells, reduces all the early reactions of the coordinate response including protein synthesis, which is followed by a disproportionately large reduction in the rate of DNA synthesis. Stimulation in the presence of physiological concentration of Mg2+ raises the total Mg and the free Mg2+ of the cells for extended periods. Mg2+ in the form of MgATP2- is required for all the phosphorylation reactions of the cell. These and related observations are imaged in the membrane, magnesium, mitosis (MMM) model of cell proliferation control, which postulates that growth factors act by combining with membrane receptors to increase intracellular free Mg2+ levels and generate the coordinate response that leads ultimately to mitosis. The MMM model also proposes that the increased Mg2+ activates phosphorylation of two proteins by mTOR, a key reaction of the PI-3K pathway. Those two proteins directly regulate the initiation of protein synthesis, the driving force of the process.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16548142

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Magnes Res        ISSN: 0953-1424            Impact factor:   1.115


  6 in total

1.  Endothelial responses of magnesium and other alloying elements in magnesium-based stent materials.

Authors:  Nan Zhao; Donghui Zhu
Journal:  Metallomics       Date:  2014-11-03       Impact factor: 4.526

2.  Importance of melastatin-like transient receptor potential 7 and cations (magnesium, calcium) in human osteoblast-like cell proliferation.

Authors:  E Abed; R Moreau
Journal:  Cell Prolif       Date:  2007-12       Impact factor: 6.831

3.  A simple spectrofluorometric assay to measure total intracellular magnesium by a hydroxyquinoline derivative.

Authors:  Giovanna Farruggia; Stefano Iotti; Luca Prodi; Nelsi Zaccheroni; Marco Montalti; Paul B Savage; Giulia Andreani; Valentina Trapani; Federica I Wolf
Journal:  J Fluoresc       Date:  2008-06-05       Impact factor: 2.217

4.  Overexpression of Na+/Mg2+ exchanger SLC41A1 attenuates pro-survival signaling.

Authors:  Gerhard Sponder; Nasrin Abdulhanan; Nadine Fröhlich; Lucia Mastrototaro; Jörg R Aschenbach; Monika Röntgen; Ivana Pilchova; Michal Cibulka; Peter Racay; Martin Kolisek
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-12-22

5.  TRPM7 is a crucial regulator of pancreatic endocrine development and high-fat-diet-induced β-cell proliferation.

Authors:  Molly K Altman; Charles M Schaub; Prasanna K Dadi; Matthew T Dickerson; Karolina E Zaborska; Arya Y Nakhe; Sarah M Graff; Thomas J Galletta; Gautami Amarnath; Ariel S Thorson; Guoqiang Gu; David A Jacobson
Journal:  Development       Date:  2021-08-16       Impact factor: 6.862

Review 6.  Magnesium: Biochemistry, Nutrition, Detection, and Social Impact of Diseases Linked to Its Deficiency.

Authors:  Diana Fiorentini; Concettina Cappadone; Giovanna Farruggia; Cecilia Prata
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2021-03-30       Impact factor: 5.717

  6 in total

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