Influence of weak static and 50 Hz magnetic fields on the redox activity of cytochrome-C oxidase
β Scribed by Bruno Nossol; Gerhard Buse; Prof. Dr. Jiri Silny
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 677 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-8462
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The effects of static and 50 Hz magnetic fields on cytochrome-C oxidase activity were investigated in vitro by strictly controlled, simultaneous polarographic measurements of the enzyme's high-and low-affinity redox reaction. Cytochrome-C oxidase was isolated from beef heart. Control experiments were carried out in the ambient geomagnetic and 50 Hz magnetic fields at respective flux densities of 45 and 1.8 pT. The experimentally applied fields, static and time-varying, were generated by Helmholtz coils at flux densities between 50 pT and 100 mT. Exposures were timed to act either on the combined enzyme-substrate interchange or directly on the enzyme's electron and proton translocations. Significant changes as high as 90% of the overall cytochrome-C oxidase activity resulted during exposure ( I ) to a static magnetic field at 300 pT or 10 mT in the high-affinity range, and (2) to a SO Hz magnetic field at 10 or 50 mT in the low-affinity range. No changes were observed at other flux densities. After exposure to a changeinducing, static or time-varying field, normal activity returned. 0 1991 ~i ~e y -~i n s , Inc.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The effect of magnetic fields (50 Hz, 100 microT[rms] sinusoidal magnetic field combined with a 55 microT geomagnetic-like field) and/or gamma rays of 60 Cobalt on the expression of the c-jun and c-fos proteins was investigated in primary rat tracheal epithelial cells and two related immortalized ce
This investigation studied the effects of 50 H a electric and magnetic fields on the pulse rate of the human heart. The ECG (electrocardiograms) of 41 male volunteers were recorded with a Holter recorder. Twenty-six subjects were measured in and outside real fields, and 15 subjects were measured in