Magnesium deficiency accelerates cellular senescence in cultured human fibroblasts
- Nutrition and Metabolism Center, Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute, Oakland, CA 94609; and Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720
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Contributed by Bruce N. Ames, February 1, 2008 (received for review December 3, 2007)
Abstract
Magnesium inadequacy affects more than half of the U.S. population and is associated with increased risk for many age-related diseases, yet the underlying mechanisms are unknown. Altered cellular physiology has been demonstrated after acute exposure to severe magnesium deficiency, but few reports have addressed the consequences of long-term exposure to moderate magnesium deficiency in human cells. Therefore, IMR-90 human fibroblasts were continuously cultured in magnesium-deficient conditions to determine the long-term effects on the cells. These fibroblasts did not demonstrate differences in cellular viability or plating efficiency but did exhibit a decreased replicative lifespan in populations cultured in magnesium-deficient compared with standard media conditions, both at ambient (20% O2) and physiological (5% O2) oxygen tension. The growth rates for immortalized IMR-90 fibroblasts were not affected under the same conditions. IMR-90 fibroblast populations cultured in magnesium-deficient conditions had increased senescence-associated β-galactosidase activity and increased p16INK4a and p21WAF1 protein expression compared with cultures from standard media conditions. Telomere attrition was also accelerated in cell populations from magnesium-deficient cultures. Thus, the long-term consequence of inadequate magnesium availability in human fibroblast cultures was accelerated cellular senescence, which may be a mechanism through which chronic magnesium inadequacy could promote or exacerbate age-related disease.
Footnotes
- *To whom correspondence may be addressed at: Nutrition and Metabolism Center, Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute, 5700 Martin Luther King, Jr. Way, Oakland, CA 94609. E-mail: bames{at}chori.org or dkillilea{at}chori.org
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Author contributions: D.W.K. and B.N.A. designed research; D.W.K. performed research; D.W.K. analyzed data; and D.W.K. wrote the paper.
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The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/0712401105/DCSupplemental.
- © 2008 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA





