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Regulation of cellular Mg2+ by Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Authors:T Beeler  K Bruce  T Dunn
Affiliation:Department of Biochemistry, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD 20814, USA.
Abstract:Regulation of cellular Mg2+ by S. cerevisiae was investigated. The minimal concentration of Mg2+ that results in optimal growth of S. cerevisiae is about 30 microM and a half-maximum growth rate is attained at about 5 microM Mg2+. Since the plasma membrane has an electrical potential greater than 100 mV, passive equilibration of Mg2+ across the plasma membrane would provide sufficient cytosolic Mg2+ (0.1-1 mM). The total cellular Mg2+ of cells grown in synthetic medium containing 1 mM Mg2+ is about 400 nmol/mg protein, most of which is bound to polyphosphate, nucleic acids, and ATP. Total cellular Mg2+ decreases to about 80 nmol/mg protein as the Mg2+ in synthetic growth medium is reduced to 0.02 mM, but remains relatively constant in growth medium containing 1 to 100 mM Mg2+. Cells shifted into Mg(2+)-free medium continue to grow by utilizing the vacuolar Mg2+ stores. Mg(2+)-starved cells replenish vacuolar Mg2+ stores with a halftime of 30 min. following the addition of 1 mM Mg2+ to the growth medium. The data indicate that cytosolic Mg2+ is maintained by the regulation of Mg2+ fluxes across both the vacuolar and plasma membranes.
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