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Mg2+ supplementation treats secretory diarrhea in mice by activating calcium-sensing receptor in intestinal epithelial cells
Livia de Souza Goncalves, … , Qi Gao, Onur Cil
Livia de Souza Goncalves, … , Qi Gao, Onur Cil
Published November 14, 2023
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2024;134(2):e171249. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI171249.
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Research Article Cell biology

Mg2+ supplementation treats secretory diarrhea in mice by activating calcium-sensing receptor in intestinal epithelial cells

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Abstract

Cholera is a global health problem with no targeted therapies. The Ca2+-sensing receptor (CaSR) is a regulator of intestinal ion transport and a therapeutic target for diarrhea, and Ca2+ is considered its main agonist. We found that increasing extracellular Ca2+ had a minimal effect on forskolin-induced Cl– secretion in human intestinal epithelial T84 cells. However, extracellular Mg2+, an often-neglected CaSR agonist, suppressed forskolin-induced Cl– secretion in T84 cells by 65% at physiological levels seen in stool (10 mM). The effect of Mg2+ occurred via the CaSR/Gq signaling that led to cAMP hydrolysis. Mg2+ (10 mM) also suppressed Cl- secretion induced by cholera toxin, heat-stable E. coli enterotoxin, and vasoactive intestinal peptide by 50%. In mouse intestinal closed loops, luminal Mg2+ treatment (20 mM) inhibited cholera toxin–induced fluid accumulation by 40%. In a mouse intestinal perfusion model of cholera, addition of 10 mM Mg2+ to the perfusate reversed net fluid transport from secretion to absorption. These results suggest that Mg2+ is the key CaSR activator in mouse and human intestinal epithelia at physiological levels in stool. Since stool Mg2+ concentrations in patients with cholera are essentially zero, oral Mg2+ supplementation, alone or in an oral rehydration solution, could be a potential therapy for cholera and other cyclic nucleotide–mediated secretory diarrheas.

Authors

Livia de Souza Goncalves, Tifany Chu, Riya Master, Parth D. Chhetri, Qi Gao, Onur Cil

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