G. Chen et al., Effect of electromagnetic field exposure on chemically induced differentiation of Friend erythroleukemia cells, ENVIR H PER, 108(10), 2000, pp. 967-972
Whether exposure of humans to extremely low frequency electromagnetic field
s (ELF-EMF) can cause cancer is controversial and therefore needs further r
esearch. We used a Friend erythroleukemia cell line that can be chemically
induced to differentiate to determine whether ELF-EMF could alter prolifera
tion and differentiation in these cells in a manner similar to that of a ch
emical tumor promoter. Exposure of this cell line to 60 Hz ELF-EMF resulted
in a dose dependent inhibition of differentiation, with maximal inhibition
peaking at 40% and 40 mG (4 muT). ELF-EMF at 10 mG (1.0 muT) and 25 mG (2.
5 muT) inhibited differentiation at 0 and 20%, respectively. ELF-EMF at 1.0
(100) and 10.0 G (1,000 muT) stimulated cell proliferation 50% above the s
ham-treated cells. The activity of telomerase, a marker of undifferentiated
cells, decreased 100x when the cells were induced to differentiate under s
ham conditions, but when the cells were exposed to 0.5 G (50 muT) there was
only a 10x decrease. In summary, ELF-EMF can partially block the different
iation of Friend erythroleukemia cells, and this results in a larger popula
tion of cells remaining in the undifferentiated, proliferative state, which
is similar to the published results of Friend erythroleukemia cells treate
d with chemical-tumor promoters.