The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of extremely low frequency and weak magnetic fields (WMF) on cardiac myocyte Ca(2+) transients, and to explore the involvement of potassium channels under the WMF effect. In addition, we aimed to find a physical explanation for the effect of WMF on cardiac myocyte Ca(2+) transients. Indo-1 loaded cells, which were exposed to a WMF at 16 Hz and 40 nT, demonstrated a 75 ± 4% reduction in cytosolic Ca(2+) transients versus control. Treatment with the K(ATP) channel blocker, glibenclamide, followed by WMF at 16 Hz exposure, blocked the reduction in cytosolic calcium transients while treatment with pinacidil, a K(ATP) channel opener, or chromanol 293B, a selective potassium channel blocker of the delayed rectifier K(+) channels, did not inhibit the effect. Based on these finding and the ion cyclotron resonance frequency theory, we further investigated the effect of WMF by changing the direct current (DC) magnetic field (B(0) ). When operating different DC magnetic fields we showed that the WMF value changed correspondingly: for B(0)  = 44.5 µT, the effect was observed at 17.05 Hz; for B(0)  = 46.5 µT, the effect was observed at 18.15 Hz; and for B(0)  = 49 µT the effect was observed at 19.1 Hz. We can conclude that the effect of WMF on Ca(2+) transients depends on the DC magnetic field level.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bem.21729DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ca2+ transients
20
magnetic field
12
cardiac myocyte
12
myocyte ca2+
12
magnetic fields
8
wmf
8
fields wmf
8
wmf cardiac
8
wmf 16 hz
8
reduction cytosolic
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!