Source
Department of Physiology, Columbia University, New York 10032, USA. mb32@columbia.edu
Abstract
PURPOSE:
To
review the responses of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) to electromagnetic
fields (EMF) in different frequency ranges, and characterise the
properties of DNA as an antenna.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
We
examined published reports of increased stress protein levels and DNA
strand breaks due to EMF interactions, both of which are indicative of
DNA damage. We also considered antenna properties such as electronic
conduction within DNA and its compact structure in the nucleus.
RESULTS:
EMF
interactions with DNA are similar over a range of non-ionising
frequencies, i.e., extremely low frequency (ELF) and radio frequency
(RF) ranges. There are similar effects in the ionising range, but the
reactions are more complex.
CONCLUSIONS:
The wide
frequency range of interaction with EMF is the functional characteristic
of a fractal antenna, and DNA appears to possess the two structural
characteristics of fractal antennas, electronic conduction and self
symmetry. These properties contribute to greater reactivity of DNA with
EMF in the environment, and the DNA damage could account for increases
in cancer epidemiology, as well as variations in the rate of chemical
evolution in early geologic history.
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21457072
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