Medical/biological Study (experimental study)

Electromagnetic fields (900 MHz) evoke consistent molecular responses in tomato plants. med./biol.

By: Roux D, Vian A, Girard S, Bonnet P, Paldian F, Davies E, Ledoigt G
Published in: Physiol Plant 2006; 128 (2): 283 - 288

Aim of study (according to editor)
To study whether short exposure (10 minutes) of a plant to a low level radiofrequency electromagnetic field, similar to that used in mobile phones, could evoke a rapid biological response at the molecular level in tomato plants.
Background/further details:
In order to determine if there was a dose response relationship between electromagnetic fields applied and the amount of transcript accumulated, plants were also exposed at others doses and durations.
Leaf tissue was harvested at 15, 30, and 60 minutes after exposure (in some experiments also immediately and after 5 minutes).

Endpoint

Exposure
General category: mobile communication system, GSM

Field characteristicsParameters
field 1: 900 MHz
continuous wave (CW)
exposure duration: continuous for 10 min
electric field strength: 5 V/m (average signal amplitude of a GSM phone)
electric field strength: 40 V/m (close to the French legal emission limit)
field 2: 900 MHz
continuous wave (CW)
exposure duration: continuous for 2 min
electric field strength: 5 V/m (average signal amplitude of a GSM phone)

Exposed system:
plant (species/strain): tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum Mill.)/VFN8
whole body exposure

Methods
Endpoint/Measurement parameters/Methodology

investigated material: DNA/RNA (in vitro)

time of investigation: after exposure

Main outcome of study (according to author)
Exposure to the electromagnetic fields induced a biphasic response, in which the levels of all three transcripts increased four- to six-fold 15 min. after the end of exposure, dropped closely to initial levels after 30 min., and then increased again at 60 min. after exposure. Although not identical, the kinetics and amplitudes of the transcripts showed striking similarities with physiologic responses following injurious treatments. Thus, the authors propose that radiofrequency electromagnetic field exposure may constitute an environmental stimulus for the tomato plants.

(Study character: medical/biological study, experimental study, full/main study)

Study funded by

Related articles i

© 1997 - 2013, Research Center for Bioelectromagnetic Interaction (femu - RWTH Aachen University, Germany).

The informational contents of the EMF-Portal are available free of charge for personal and strictly non-commercial purposes. The informational contents of the EMF-Portal may be retrieved, read or printed, but not (i) copied, (ii) changed or (iii) saved in any format, neither electronically nor on other storage media. Permissions for publication, reproduction, commercial purposes or third party propagation of contents of the EMF-Portal – including partial excerpts or revised formats – have to be obtained from the femu Aachen University-copyright holders. By retrieving, reading or printing these documents you expressly state your agreement with all conditions in the fine print.