The Discrimination between Magnesium and Manganese by Serum Proteins

Abstract
Magnesium and manganese have proved physically and functionally interchangeable in many isolated biological systems investigated in vitro. This lack of discrimination contrasts sharply with the high biological specificity exhibited by intact mammals under a large variety of conditions. The dichotomy between intact animals and their isolated systems might be due at least partially to presence vs. absence of an intact circulation. Hence the capability of mammalian plasma to discriminate between the alkaline earth and the transition metal was investigated by means of equilibrium dialysis, exchange, ultrafiltration, ultracentrifugation, and zone electrophoresis. The states of the respective elements are thus contrasted as follows: (a) Magnesium is partially bound, manganese totally. (b) Magnesium is nonselectively bound by serum proteins, manganese selectively by a ß1-globulin. (c) Under conditions approaching physiological, the two metals do not interchange. This is interpreted as indicating that the plasma proteins contribute to biological specificity by discriminating between a trace metal and a macronutrient.