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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Magnetite in human tissues: a mechanism for the biological effects of weak ELF magnetic fields.

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TLDR
The development of simple behavioral conditioning experiments for training honey bees to discriminate magnetic fields demonstrates conclusively that at least one terrestrial animal is capable of detecting earth-strength magnetic fields through a sensory process.
Abstract
Due to the apparent lack of a biophysical mechanism, the question of whether weak, low-frequency magnetic fields are able to influence living organisms has long been one of the most controversial subjects in any field of science. However, two developments during the past decade have changed this perception dramatically, the first being the discovery that many organisms, including humans, biochemically precipitate the ferrimagnetic mineral magnetite (Fe_(3)S_4). In the magnetotactic bacteria, the geomagnetic response is based on either biogenic magnetite or greigite (Fe_(3)S_4), and reasonably good evidence exists that this is also the case in higher animals such as the honey bee. Second, the development of simple behavioral conditioning experiments for training honey bees to discriminate magnetic fields demonstrates conclusively that at least one terrestrial animal is capable of detecting earth-strength magnetic fields through a sensory process. In turn, the existence of this ability implies the presence of specialized receptors which interact at the cellular level with weak magnetic fields in a fashion exceeding thermal noise. A simple calculation shows that magnetosomes moving in response to earth-strength ELF fields are capable of opening trans-membrane ion channels, in a fashion similar to those predicted by ionic resonance models. Hence, the presence of trace levels of biogenic magnetite in virtually all human tissues examined suggests that similar biophysical processes may explain a variety of weak field ELF bioeffects.

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Journal Article

Guidelines for limiting exposure to time-varying electric, magnetic, and electromagnetic fields (up to 300 GHz)

A Ahlbom
- 01 Jan 1998 - 
TL;DR: The International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP)—was established as a successor to the IRPA/INIRC, which developed a number of health criteria documents on NIR as part of WHO’s Environmental Health Criteria Programme, sponsored by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).
Journal Article

ICNIRP Guidelines for limiting exposure to time-varying electric and magnetic fields (1 Hz to 100 kHz).

TL;DR: This publication replaces the low-frequency part of the 1998 guidelines and some guidance in this document is extended to 10 MHz to cover the nervous system effects in this frequency range.
Book ChapterDOI

Effects of electromagnetic fields on molecules and cells.

TL;DR: There is no evidence that direct posttranscription effects occur as a result of EMF exposure, and the paucity of genotoxic effects would support the suggestion that the fields act in tumor promotion rather than initiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Nanoparticles on the Cell Life Cycle

TL;DR: Effect of Nanoparticles on the Cell Life Cycle Morteza Mahmoudi,* Kayhan Azadmanesh, Mohammad A. Shokrgozar, W. Shane Journeay, and Sophie Laurent
Journal ArticleDOI

Electromagnetic cellular interactions.

TL;DR: It is shown that there is a rather large number of theories on how cells can generate and detect electromagnetic fields and experimental evidence on electromagnetic cellular interactions in the modern scientific literature is continuously accumulating.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Minerals formed by organisms

TL;DR: Biogenic minerals commonly have attributes which distinguish them from their inorganic counterparts, and they fulfill important biological functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Case-control study of childhood cancer and exposure to 60-hz magnetic fields

TL;DR: The results encourage further examination of the carcinogenic potential from this form of nonionizing radiation, and are nonresponse, differential mobility of cases and controls, and a presumably nondifferential exposure misclassification from the use of imperfect surrogates for long-term magnetic field exposure history.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compliance of the hair bundle associated with gating of mechanoelectrical transduction channels in the Bullfrog's saccular hair cell

TL;DR: The magnitude and displacement dependence of the gating compliance provide quantitative information about the molecular basis of mechanoelectrical transduction: the force required to open each channel, the number of transduction channels per hair cell, the stiffness of a gating spring, and the swing of a channel's gate as it opens.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetite biomineralization in the human brain.

TL;DR: Biogenic magnetite in the human brain may account for high-field saturation effects observed in the T1 and T2 values of magnetic resonance imaging and, perhaps, for a variety of biological effects of low-frequency magnetic fields.
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