| Literature DB >> 29094036 |
Olga Zeni1, Myrtill Simkó2, Maria Rosaria Scarfi1, Mats-Olof Mattsson3.
Abstract
It has been shown that magnetic fields in the extremely low frequency range (ELF-MF) can act as a stressor in various in vivo or in vitro systems, at flux density levels below those inducing excitation of nerve and muscle cells, which are setting the limits used by most generally accepted exposure guidelines, such as the ones published by the International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection. In response to a variety of physiological and environmental factors, including heat, cells activate an ancient signaling pathway leading to the transient expression of heat shock proteins (HSPs), which exhibit sophisticated protection mechanisms. A number of studies suggest that also ELF-MF exposure can activate the cellular stress response and cause increased HSPs expression, both on the mRNA and the protein levels. In this review, we provide some of the presently available data on cellular responses, especially regarding HSP expression, due to single and combined exposure to ELF-MF and heat, with the aim to compare the induced effects and to detect possible common modes of action. Some evidence suggest that MF and heat can act as costressors inducing a kind of thermotolerance in cell cultures and in organisms. The MF exposure might produce a potentiated or synergistic biological response such as an increase in HSPs expression, in combination with a well-defined stress, and in turn exert beneficial effects during certain circumstances.Entities:
Keywords: combined exposures; extremely low frequency magnetic fields; heat; heat shock proteins; thermotolerance
Year: 2017 PMID: 29094036 PMCID: PMC5651525 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Combined exposure to ELF magnetic field and heat: studies reporting on a potentiation of heat-induced effects.
| Reference | Model system | Exposure conditions | Thermal stress conditions | End point (s) | Outcome of coexposure | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Human adenocarcinoma cells (HeLa) | 60 Hz | 43°C | Luciferase gene expression in cells transfected with HSP70 promoter | Synergistic effect (luciferase gene expression) | Increased luciferase expression after MF alone |
| 80 µT | 20 min | |||||
| 20 min | Concurrent | |||||
| ( | Endothelial cells from pig pulmonary arteries (SPAE) | 50 Hz | 44°C | mRNA level and synthesis of | Enhanced accumulation and translation of the heat-induced | MF induced an increased level of inducible |
| 680 µT | 30 min | |||||
| 24 h | Postexposure | |||||
| ( | Human myeloid leukemia HL-60 cells | 50 Hz | 43°C | mRNA level and synthesis of | Strong induction in | Increased |
| 10–140 µT | 30 min | |||||
| 30 min | Concurrent | |||||
| ( | Breast MCF 7 and cervical HeLa (cancer); breast epithelium HBL-100 (healthy) | 50 Hz train pulsed MF (2 s burst and 1 s rest) | 40°C | HSP70 synthesis, cell proliferation | Increased HSP70 by MF under thermal stress in both healthy and cancer cells | No effects of MF alone |
| 42°C | ||||||
| Concurrent | ||||||
| 34 mT | ||||||
| 0–12 h | ||||||
| ( | 50 Hz | 35°C | Death rate, life span, locomotion, | MF enhanced thermal stress effects | Some gender differences, sporadic MF effect at 25°C | |
| 3 mT | Concurrent | |||||
| 2 and 24 h | ||||||
| ( | Transgenic | 50 Hz | 28 and 29°C | Expression of | EMF enhanced the lacZ reporter gene expression under the control of | No effect of MF alone |
| 50, 100 µT | Concurrent | |||||
| 1 h | ||||||
| ( | Wistar rats | 60 Hz | 43°C for 12 min before MF | Histopathological and histomorphometrical analysis of rat testes | MF aggravates the effects of thermal stress | |
| 1 mT | ||||||
| 15, 30, 60 days | ||||||
| ( | 50 Hz | 34–37°C | Embryogenesis anomalies | MF aggravates the anomalies due to thermal stress | ||
| 100 µT | Concurrent | |||||
| 30 min | ||||||
Combined exposure to ELF magnetic field and heat: studies reporting protection from secondary effects of heat.
| Reference | Model system | Exposure conditions | Thermal stress conditions | End point (s) | Outcome of coexposure | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Human myeloid leukemia HL-60 cells | 50 Hz | 37, 39, and 41°C | Cell survival, cell cycle analyzed up to 10 days postexposure | MF protects from the cell growth arrest induced by 41°C | Authors hypothesized specific interactions of HSP70 with molecules regulating cell cycle, apoptosis |
| 60 µT | ||||||
| 30 min | Concurrent | |||||
| ( | Human myeloid leukemia HL-60 cells | 50 Hz | 41°C | Strong induction of | ||
| 60 µT | Concurrent | |||||
| 30 min | ||||||
| Negation of the thermal stress-induced cell cycle arrest | ||||||
| ( | Heat sensitive (HL-60 and HL-60R) and heat-insensitive (human Burkitt lymphoma, Raji) cells | 60 Hz | 43°C | Apoptosis | 12 h MF protects from heat-induced apoptosis in all the cell types | The protective effect lasts up to 48 h postexposure |
| 150 µT | 1 h | |||||
| 4, 12, 24 h | Postexposure | |||||
| ( | Fertilized eggs of | 60 Hz | 36.5°C (lethal temperature) | HSP70 synthesis, survival | 114% increase in HSP70 levels, 82% increase in survival | Preconditioning at 32°C was not so effective in increasing survival |
| 8 µT | ||||||
| 30 min | 60 min | |||||
| Post exposure | ||||||