Cell type-specific genotoxic effects of intermittent extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields
- PMID: 15899587
- DOI: 10.1016/j.mrgentox.2005.03.011
Cell type-specific genotoxic effects of intermittent extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields
Abstract
The issue of adverse health effects of extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields (ELF-EMFs) is highly controversial. Contradictory results regarding the genotoxic potential of ELF-EMF have been reported in the literature. To test whether this controversy might reflect differences between the cellular targets examined we exposed cultured cells derived from different tissues to an intermittent ELF-EMF (50 Hz sinusoidal, 1 mT) for 1-24h. The alkaline and neutral comet assays were used to assess ELF-EMF-induced DNA strand breaks. We could identify three responder (human fibroblasts, human melanocytes, rat granulosa cells) and three non-responder cell types (human lymphocytes, human monocytes, human skeletal muscle cells), which points to the significance of the cell system used when investigating genotoxic effects of ELF-EMF.
Comment in
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Comments on: "DNA strand breaks" by Diem et al. [Mutat. Res. 583 (2005) 178-183] and Ivancsits et al. [Mutat. Res. 583 (2005) 184-188].Mutat Res. 2006 Jan 31;603(1):104-6; author reply 107-9. doi: 10.1016/j.mrgentox.2005.11.004. Epub 2005 Dec 27. Mutat Res. 2006. PMID: 16384726 No abstract available.
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