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Impaired manganese metabolism causes mitotic misregulation.


ABSTRACT: Manganese is an essential trace element, whose intracellular levels need to be carefully regulated. Mn(2+) acts as a cofactor for many enzymes and excess of Mn(2+) is toxic. Alterations in Mn(2+) homeostasis affect metabolic functions and mutations in the human Mn(2+)/Ca(2+) transporter ATP2C1 have been linked to Hailey-Hailey disease. By deletion of the yeast orthologue PMR1 we have studied the impact of Mn(2+) on cell cycle progression and show that an excess of cytosolic Mn(2+) alters S-phase transit, induces transcriptional up-regulation of cell cycle regulators, bypasses the need for S-phase cell cycle checkpoints and predisposes to genomic instability. On the other hand, we find that depletion of the Golgi Mn(2+) pool requires a functional morphology checkpoint to avoid the formation of polyploid cells.

SUBMITTER: Garcia-Rodriguez N 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3365726 | biostudies-literature | 2012 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Impaired manganese metabolism causes mitotic misregulation.

García-Rodríguez Néstor N   Díaz de la Loza María del Carmen Mdel C   Andreson Bethany B   Monje-Casas Fernando F   Rothstein Rodney R   Wellinger Ralf Erik RE  

The Journal of biological chemistry 20120404 22


Manganese is an essential trace element, whose intracellular levels need to be carefully regulated. Mn(2+) acts as a cofactor for many enzymes and excess of Mn(2+) is toxic. Alterations in Mn(2+) homeostasis affect metabolic functions and mutations in the human Mn(2+)/Ca(2+) transporter ATP2C1 have been linked to Hailey-Hailey disease. By deletion of the yeast orthologue PMR1 we have studied the impact of Mn(2+) on cell cycle progression and show that an excess of cytosolic Mn(2+) alters S-phase  ...[more]

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