Paper
Action of boron at the molecular level
Published Jan 1, 2002 · M. Dzondo-Gadet, R. Mayap-Nzietchueng, K. Hess
Biological Trace Element Research
114
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Abstract
It has been shown that boric acid has well-defined biological effects such as stimulation of wound healing in vivo, release of growth factors and cytokines, and increase of the extracellular matrice turn-over. We examined its action at the molecular level, using cell-free systems of transcription (isolated placenta nuclei) and translation (wheat germ extract). We found that 10 mM boric acid greatly increased RNA synthesis, measured by absorbance at 260 nm (×6.4) or by [3H]-UTP uptake (×11). Full-length functional mRNA was produced because proteins of 14–80 kDa were translated. Among these proteins, factors involved in angiogenesis and, subsequently, in wound healing (VEGF and TGFβ) were identified by slot blot, whereas growth factors such as FGF1 and TNFα were not detected. These results demonstrate that boron may contribute to biological cell activities at both the transcription and translation levels. However, the mechanism of action is still not known.
Boric acid increases RNA synthesis and contributes to biological cell activities at both transcription and translation levels, but its exact mechanism of action remains unclear.
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