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Regulatory responses of hepatocytes, macrophages and vascular endothelial cells to magnesium deficiency.

The liver is the organ that responds to nutritional disturbances including magnesium deficiency. The present study evaluated cellular responses to magnesium deficiency using model cells of the liver, namely, HepG2 cells as hepatocytes, RAW264.7 cells as Kupffer cells and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) as vascular endothelial cells; we examined effects of culture with magnesium deficient medium on cell responses in individual types of cells as well as interactive responses among cells. Metabolomic analyses indicated that magnesium deficiency differentially affected the cellular content of metabolites among HepG2 cells, RAW264.7 cells and HUVECs. The cellular content of the metabolites in HepG2 cells and HUVECs was also affected by the conditioned medium from RAW264.7 cells cultured with the magnesium-deficient media. The changes in HUVECs partly resembled those of the livers of magnesium-deficient rats previously described. RNA-seq analyses indicated that magnesium deficiency modulated the expression levels of molecules related to the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and oxidative stress/antioxidant response in HepG2 cells and RAW264.7 cells, respectively. Furthermore, when HUVECs were co-cultured with RAW264.7 cells, lipopolysaccharide-induced expression of interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-6 was enhanced by magnesium deficiency, depending on the presence of RAW264.7 cells. The present study reveals that magnesium deficiency affects cellular metabolism in HepG2 liver cells, RAW264.7 macrophages and HUVECs, and that the modulation of cellular responses to extracellular magnesium deficiency in HUVECs depends on the presence of RAW264.7 cells. The complex responses in individual cells and through cell interactions partly explain the regulatory reaction to magnesium deficiency in the liver.

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