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Time‐varying and static magnetic fields act in combination to alter calcium signal transduction in the lymphocyte
Author(s) -
Yost M.G.,
Liburdy R.P.
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
febs letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.593
H-Index - 257
eISSN - 1873-3468
pISSN - 0014-5793
DOI - 10.1016/0014-5793(92)80361-j
Subject(s) - bioelectromagnetics , calcium , magnetic field , concanavalin a , magnetostatics , intensity (physics) , nuclear magnetic resonance , calcium signaling , lymphocyte , signal transduction , chemistry , biophysics , physics , biology , immunology , biochemistry , optics , in vitro , quantum mechanics , organic chemistry
We have tested the hypothesis that extremely low frequency (ELF) time‐varying magnetic fields act in combination with static magnetic fields to alter calcium signalling in the lymphocyte. Results indicate that a 60‐min exposure of thymic lymphocytes at 37 ± 0.05°C to a 16 Hz, 421 mG (42.1 μT) magnetic field simultaneously with a colinear static magnetic field of 234 mG (23.4 μT) (a.c./d.c. field intensity ratio = 1.8) inhibits calcium influx triggered by the mitogen Concanavalin A. Significantly, resting lymphocytes do not respond to the fields, thus, only mitogen‐activated cells undergoing calcium signalling exhibit a field response. These results indicate that signal transduction involving calcium is an important biological constraint which operates to mediate this field interaction. Additional split field exposures show that the presence of the a.c. field or the d.c. field alone does not produce an effect. This is consistent with a proposed parametric resonance theory of interaction of low intensity magnetic fields with biological systems (L.L. Lednev (1991) Bioelectromagnetics 12, 71–75), which predicts the occurrance or biological effects at specific values for the frequency and field intensity of the ELF and static magnetic fields.

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