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Effect of radiofrequency radiation on mRNA expression in cultured rodent cells.

PAPER pubmed Physiological chemistry and physics and medical NMR 1988 In vitro study Effect: no_effect Evidence: Low

Abstract

Four rodent cell lines were exposed to 2450 MHz microwave radiation at a Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) of 103.5 +/- 4.2 W/kg for varying lengths of time at 37 degrees, 40 degrees, 42 degrees and 45 degrees C. mRNA was extracted from microwave-exposed and sham-exposed cells and dot blotted or Northern blotted to nitrocellulose. Radioisotope labelled DNA probes of oncogenes, heat shock protein or long terminal repeat sequences were hybridized to the mRNA, and the resulting autoradiographs analyzed for differences in levels of mRNA expression between exposed and nonexposed samples. With the cell lines and probes used in this study no significant differences in mRNA expression were observed after microwave exposure.

AI evidence extraction

At a glance
Study type
In vitro study
Effect direction
no_effect
Population
Four rodent cell lines (cultured)
Sample size
Exposure
microwave · 2450 MHz · 103.5 W/kg · varying lengths of time
Evidence strength
Low
Confidence: 78% · Peer-reviewed: yes

Main findings

Across four rodent cell lines and the DNA probes used (oncogenes, heat shock protein, long terminal repeat sequences), no significant differences in mRNA expression were observed between microwave-exposed and sham-exposed samples.

Outcomes measured

  • mRNA expression (oncogenes)
  • mRNA expression (heat shock protein)
  • mRNA expression (long terminal repeat sequences)

Limitations

  • In vitro study (cultured rodent cell lines)
  • Exposure durations not specified in the abstract
  • Only selected mRNA targets/probes were assessed
  • High SAR exposure level; generalizability to other exposure conditions not addressed in abstract
View raw extracted JSON
{
    "study_type": "in_vitro",
    "exposure": {
        "band": "microwave",
        "source": null,
        "frequency_mhz": 2450,
        "sar_wkg": 103.5,
        "duration": "varying lengths of time"
    },
    "population": "Four rodent cell lines (cultured)",
    "sample_size": null,
    "outcomes": [
        "mRNA expression (oncogenes)",
        "mRNA expression (heat shock protein)",
        "mRNA expression (long terminal repeat sequences)"
    ],
    "main_findings": "Across four rodent cell lines and the DNA probes used (oncogenes, heat shock protein, long terminal repeat sequences), no significant differences in mRNA expression were observed between microwave-exposed and sham-exposed samples.",
    "effect_direction": "no_effect",
    "limitations": [
        "In vitro study (cultured rodent cell lines)",
        "Exposure durations not specified in the abstract",
        "Only selected mRNA targets/probes were assessed",
        "High SAR exposure level; generalizability to other exposure conditions not addressed in abstract"
    ],
    "evidence_strength": "low",
    "confidence": 0.7800000000000000266453525910037569701671600341796875,
    "peer_reviewed_likely": "yes",
    "keywords": [
        "microwave radiation",
        "radiofrequency",
        "2450 MHz",
        "SAR",
        "rodent cell lines",
        "mRNA expression",
        "oncogenes",
        "heat shock protein",
        "Northern blot",
        "dot blot",
        "sham-exposed"
    ],
    "suggested_hubs": []
}

AI can be wrong. Always verify against the paper.

AI-extracted fields are generated from the abstract/metadata and may be incomplete or incorrect. This content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice.

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