Subject:  Human vulnerability to EMF signals......
Date:     Tue, 2 Dec 1997 092434 -0600 (CST)
From:     "Roy L. Beavers" <rbeavers@mail.llion.org>
To:       emfguru@hotmail.com
--------------------------------------------------

Hi everybody:

I picked up the following news report last week, but we were so busy 
I didn't send it.  It suggests some interesting new possibilities
regarding the locus of "that first electron interaction" which may
lead through the biological cascade to ultimate health consequences.....

Cheerio......

Roy Beavers (EMFguru)
rbeavers@llion.org..............http://www.feb.se/EMF-L/EMF-L.html
................................It is better to light a single candle ...
than to curse the darkness...............................................


KNOW ANYBODY WE SHOULD ADD TO THIS LIST?????

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 28 Nov 1997 05:14:15 -0600 (CST)
From: "Roy L. Beavers" 
To: rbeavers@mail.llion.org

   
12:17 PM ET 11/27/97

Biological clock isn't just in your head - report

        
         Release at 4 P.M. EST
            By Deborah Zabarenko
            WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Your biological clock -- the internal
mechanism that helps you sleep at night and wake in the morning
-- might not be just in your head, scientists have found.
            If you're a male, it's probably also in your testicles.
            ``It does give a whole new meaning to the rhythm method,''
said Steve Kay, a cell biologist at the Scripps Research
Institute in San Diego.
            Scientists used to believe that the human body's clock was
all inside the brain, in a place called the superchiasmatic
nucleus, but a new study in Thursday's edition of the journal
Science found that clocks may be ticking all over the body.
            These clocks, determined in different animals by different
genes, respond to daily changes in light over the course of a
day and to the more gradual changes in light over the course of
a year.
            In flies, mice and men, the gene is called the period gene.
            ``Recently the period gene has been found to be in humans,''
Kay said in a telephone interview. ``The place where the period
gene is most highly expressed in mouse and I think in humans is
the testes.''
            Kay and other researchers at Brandeis University in Boston
and at the National Science Foundation's Center for Biological
Timing studied fruit flies to determine where the period gene
was working to set the body's circadian rhythms.
            The scientists identified this so-called period gene,
spliced it with a jellyfish gene that stained the period gene
fluorescent green, and looked at the flies under microscopes.
            The period gene was all over the insects: in the digestive
tract, in the mouth, on the feet and legs and at the base of
tiny hairs, according to Steve Kay of the Scripps Research
Institute in La Jolla, California.
            With a bit more genetic splicing, using firefly genes this
time, the scientists managed to find which of these biological
clocks were actually ticking in the fruit flies, Kay said in a
telephone interview.
            Many of them were ticking with 24-hour regularity, and this
was visible because parts of the fruit flies glowed dull yellow
and dimmed over a one-day cycle, independently of the flies'
brains.
            The study of these individual genes may shed light on such
larger biological clock-related ailments as seasonal-affective
disorders, which are characterized by depression in some people
during the darker, winter months.
            It could also lead to new strategies for the treatment of
jet lag and shift work, the scientists said.  [Guru: or to the effects of
EMF exposure????]
        
 ^REUTERS@

References

   1. http://www.infobeat.com/main/cgi/main_merc.cgi?refurl=www.fullstory.com

.-


Archive provided courtesy of WaveGuide, http://www.wave-guide.org
Reprinted with permission of Roy Beavers, http://www.feb.se/EMF-L/EMF-L.html