| Literature DB >> 23912329 |
Sara Castiglioni1, Alessandra Cazzaniga, Walter Albisetti, Jeanette A M Maier.
Abstract
A tight control of magnesium homeostasis seems to be crucial for bone health. On the basis of experimental and epidemiological studies, both low and high magnesium have harmful effects on the bones. Magnesium deficiency contributes to osteoporosis directly by acting on crystal formation and on bone cells and indirectly by impacting on the secretion and the activity of parathyroid hormone and by promoting low grade inflammation. Less is known about the mechanisms responsible for the mineralization defects observed when magnesium is elevated. Overall, controlling and maintaining magnesium homeostasis represents a helpful intervention to maintain bone integrity.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23912329 PMCID: PMC3775240 DOI: 10.3390/nu5083022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Present knowledge about the mechanisms involved in linking Mg deficiency and osteoporosis. Remarkably, similar events are implicated in experimental models and in humans. Because the vasculature plays an important role in bone remodeling, we also hypothesize that low Mg induced-endothelial dysfunction contributes to the decline of bone mass.
Inherited disorders leading to hypomagnesemia. The function of the wild type protein is briefly described.
| Disease | * Omim® | Gene | Protein |
|---|---|---|---|
| recessive familial hypomagnesemia with hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis | 248250 | CLDN16 | Claudin-16 and Claudin-19 |
| recessive hypomagnesemia with secondary hypolcalcemia | 602074 | TRPM6 | TRPM6 |
| dominant renal hypomagnesemia | 154020 | FXYD2 | FXYD2 |
| recessive renal hypomagnesemia | 131530 | EGF | EGF |
| dominant hypomagnesemia | 607803 | CNNM2 | CNNM2 |
| autosomal dominant myokymia with hypomagnesemia | 176260 | KCNA1 | Kv1.1 |
* Omim: Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man.