In vitro studies of the influence of ELF electromagnetic fields on the activity of soluble and insoluble peroxidase
β Scribed by M. Portaccio; P. De Luca; D. Durante; S. Rossi; U. Bencivenga; P. Canciglia; M. Lepore; A. Mattei; A. De Maio; D.G. Mita
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 142 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
The influence of an extremely low frequency (ELF) magnetic field (50 Hz and 1 mT, EMF) on the activity of a soluble and insoluble horseradish peroxidase (E.C. 1.11.17) has been studied as a function of time. Insoluble derivatives were obtained by enzyme entrapment into two different gelatin membranes or by covalent attachment of the enzyme on two nylon membranes, differently preactivated. Results have shown that the field affects the inactivation rate of the soluble enzyme, while no effects are observed with insoluble derivatives. Since in vivo enzymes are immobilised into the biomembrane bilayer or entrapped into the cytoplasmic mixture, one might speculate that our experimental conditions do not reflect the catalytic activity of the enzymes in vivo. Bioelectromagnetics 24:449β456, 2003. Β© 2003 WileyβLiss, Inc.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract An acceleration of differentiation, at the expense of proliferation, is observed after exposure of various biological models to low frequency and low amplitude electric and electromagnetic fields. Following these results showing significant modifications, we try to identify the biologic
## Abstract A study of the influence of electromagnetic fields (EMF) of various frequencies, from 50 up to 400 Hz, on the catalytic activity of soluble and insoluble horseradish peroxidase (POD) was carried out. To simulate the conditions in which the enzyme operates in vivo, the POD was immobilize
Different species of ciliates (Paramecium biaurelia, Loxodes striatus, Tetrahymena thermophila) have been taken as model systems to study the effects of extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields (50 Hz, 0.5-2.0 mT) on the cellular level. A dose-dependent increase in the mean swimming velocity a
## Abstract Although pulsed electromagnetic fields (PEMFs) have been used for treatments of nonunion bone fracture healing for more than three decades, the underlying cellular mechanism of bone formation promoted by PEMFs is still unclear. It has been observed that a series of parameters such as pu
Experiments have been conducted to examine the effect of chronic administration of bromoxynil, Β―uroxipir and bensultap on the in-vitro seizure susceptibility (induced by 4-aminopyridine) and excitability of neocortical slices of rat brain. The treatment regimes were (A) administration of spray solut