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Reversible regulation by magnesium of chick embryo fibroblast proliferation
22
Citations
28
References
1978
Year
Cell CultureCell ProliferationCell GrowthCellular PhysiologyEmbryologyEmbryo CultureReversible RegulationFibroblast Growth FactorRounded AppearanceExternal MediumHealth SciencesEmbryonic DevelopmentOrganogenesisCell BiologyDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyIn Vitro TechniquesTissue CultureMedicineCell DevelopmentExtracellular Matrix
Abstract The rates of 3 H‐thymidine incorporation and of cell proliferation in chick embryo fibroblast cultures are reduced coordinately when the [Mg 2+ ] of the external medium is reduced below the physiological concentration of about 0.8 mM. These effects of moderately reduced [Mg 2+ ] and the accompanying change in appearance of the cells, resemble the effects produced by lowering the [serum] of the medium. Cells subjected to severe Mg 2+ deprivation, especially at low [Ca 2+ ], die and detach from the culture dish. Cells kept at a reduced rate of proliferation for three days by moderate Mg 2+ deprivation are quickly restored to rapid proliferation upon restoration of the normal [Mg 2+ ] of the medium. The rate of proliferation of the chick embryo cells is reduced markedly by lowering [Ca 2+ ] about 100‐fold, but unlike the case of Mg 2+ ‐deprivation this can occur without significant effect on the rate of 3 H‐thymidine incorporation. More severe Ca 2+ deprivation, which does lower the rate of 3 H‐thymidine incorporation, produces retraction of cells from one another and from the dish, and results in a distinctly abnormal, rounded appearance. The results lend weight to the thesis that free [Mg 2+ ] plays a central role within the cell in the coordinate control of metabolism and growth. They also suggest that the effects produced by varying [Ca 2+ ] in the medium are caused by changes at the external surface of the cell.
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