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Research Article

Extra-low-frequency magnetic fields alter cancer cells through metabolic restriction

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Pages 264-275 | Received 08 Jan 2013, Accepted 26 May 2013, Published online: 05 Aug 2013
 

Abstract

Background: Biological effects of extra-low-frequency (ELF) magnetic fields (MFs) have lacked a credible mechanism of interaction between MFs and living material. Objectives: To examine the effect of ELF-MFs on cancer cells. Methods: Five cancer cell lines were exposed to ELF-MFs within the range of 0.025–5 µT, and the cells were examined for karyotype changes after 6 d. Results: All cancer cells lines lost chromosomes from MF exposure, with a mostly flat dose-response. Constant MF exposures for three weeks allow a rising return to the baseline, unperturbed karyotypes. From this point, small MF increases or decreases are again capable of inducing karyotype contractions (KCs). Our data suggest that the KCs are caused by MF interference with mitochondria’s adenosine triphosphate synthase (ATPS), compensated by the action of adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK). The effects of MFs are similar to those of the ATPS inhibitor, oligomycin. They are amplified by metformin, an AMPK stimulator, and attenuated by resistin, an AMPK inhibitor. Over environmental MFs, KCs of various cancer cell lines show exceptionally wide and flat dose-responses, except for those of erythroleukemia cells, which display a progressive rise from 0.025 to 0.4 µT. Conclusions: The biological effects of MFs are connected to an alteration in the structure of water that impedes the flux of protons in ATPS channels. These results may be environmentally important, in view of the central roles played in human physiology by ATPS and AMPK, particularly in their links to diabetes, cancer and longevity.

Acknowledgments

Authors acknowledge the late Nancy Wertheimer and Edward Leeper, who saw it first; Semikhina and Kiselev, whose work made our analysis possible. We are grateful to Janet Moir and Lorne Beckman of the Royal Victoria Hospital for laboratory support and Michel Bourdages, Institut de Recherche d’Hydro-Québec, for equipment contributions. We thank Louis Slesin for reviewing the document. We also thank an anonymous reviewer for contributions to the article.

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