Discrimination between different types of low-level luminescence in mammalian cells: the biophysical radiation
- PMID: 2801216
- DOI: 10.1002/bio.1170040135
Discrimination between different types of low-level luminescence in mammalian cells: the biophysical radiation
Abstract
Cellular low-level luminescence was measured after various disintegrative processes in brain cell preparations. In addition to known origins of low-level luminescence, e.g. oxygen radical reactions or enzymatic and non-enzymatic redox systems, a further source of photon emission is reported which is independent of external oxygen, oxygen radicals and enzyme activities. Vital cells from rat brain homogenates or pig oligodendrocytes could be kept for hours at 37 degrees C without any photon emission. Only after disintegrative processes a cellular photon emission could be induced. The maximal intensity of about 400 impulses/s/mg protein and a total radiation of about 6 X 10(6) l/mg depended on the type of cells. The signal could be retained completely at 4 degrees C or in frozen samples. Heating (10 min, 90 degrees C) did not suppress the photon emission. Luminol and lucigenin did not amplify the signal as is usually observed in oxygen radical-producing cells. Non-specific radical scavengers as well as detergents suppressed the cellular photon emission completely. It is suggested that this cellular luminescence represents a biophysical radiation which originates from the interruption of an intermolecular radiationless energy transfer.
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