Drosophila Oogenesis as a Bio‑Marker Responding to EMF Sources

Published: 2014, partially EU funded
Reference: Margaritis LH, et al. Drosophila oogenesis as a bio‑marker responding to EMF sources. Electromagnetic Biology and Medicine. 2014;33(3):165‑187. PubMed

Why fruit flies matter

Fruit flies are small but scientifically powerful. They share many biological pathways with humans, reproduce quickly, and their genetics are well understood. This makes them ideal for studying subtle effects of environmental exposures.

One remarkable finding demonstrates the relevance to humans: removing cryptochrome genes in fruit flies eliminates their sensitivity to magnetic fields, but replacing them with human cryptochrome genes restores this sensitivity. This shows that human cryptochromes are indeed magneto‑sensitive (Foley et al., 2011). Building on this, Henshaw and Philips (2024) – a paper ranked among the most read in the International Journal of Radiation Biology reveals that nearly all life on Earth is magneto‑sensitive, underscoring the extraordinary and far‑reaching implications of EMF exposure. 👉 Free to download DOI link

What Dr Lukas Margaritis study found

Dr Lukas Margaritis and his team tested the effects of electromagnetic fields from mobile phones, DECT handsets and Wi‑Fi on fruit fly egg cell development. The key finding, shown in Figure 25, demonstrates a clear correlation between increased cell death and decreased reproductive output. This provides strong evidence that EMF exposure can directly affect cell health and reproduction.

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Figure 25: Correlation of apoptotic cell death increase with the decrease in fecundity for the different exposure protocols. This figure highlights the link between EMF‑induced cell death and reduced reproductive output.

Why it matters today

With wireless technology now ubiquitous, understanding how EMFs affect living cells is critical. These findings guide public health decisions and illustrate how careful science can reveal early biological effects before they become obvious in humans.

Abstract

The model biological organisms Drosophila melanogaster and Drosophila virilis have been utilized to assess effects on apoptotic cell death of follicles during oogenesis and reproductive capacity (fecundity) decline. A total of 280 different experiments were performed using newly emerged flies exposed for short time daily for 3‑7 days to various EMF sources including GSM 900/1800 MHz mobile phone, 1880‑1900 MHz DECT wireless base, DECT wireless handset, mobile phone‑DECT handset combination, 2.44 GHz wireless network Wi‑Fi, 2.44 GHz Bluetooth, 92.8 MHz FM generator, 27.15 MHz baby monitor, 900 MHz CW RF generator, and microwave oven’s 2.44 GHz RF and magnetic field components. Mobile phone was used as a reference exposure system for evaluating factors considered very important in dosimetry extending published work with D. melanogaster to the insect D. virilis. Distance from the emitting source, the exposure duration and the repeatability were examined. All EMF sources used created statistically significant effects regarding fecundity and cell death‑apoptosis induction, even at very low intensity levels (0.3 V/m Bluetooth radiation), well below ICNIRP’s guidelines, suggesting that Drosophila oogenesis system is suitable to be used as a biomarker for exploring potential EMF bioactivity. Also, there is no linear cumulative effect when increasing the duration of exposure or using one EMF source after the other (i.e. mobile phone and DECT handset) at the specific conditions used. The role of the average versus the peak E‑field values as measured by spectrum analyzers on the final effects is discussed.

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References

  • Margaritis LH, et al. Drosophila oogenesis as a bio‑marker responding to EMF sources. Electromagnetic Biology and Medicine. 2014;33(3):165‑187. PubMed
  • Foley LE, Gegear RJ, Reppert SM. Human cryptochrome exhibits light‑dependent magnetosensitivity. Nature Communications. 2011;2:356. PubMed

Visiting the lab

Eileen O’Connor, Director of the EM Radiation Research Trust, and Sissel Halmøy, Norwegian rocket scientist and Chair of the International EMF Alliance, were invited to present at a conference in Athens in 2014. During this visit, Dr Margaritis and his colleagues warmly welcomed them to their laboratory at Athens University. They were honoured to meet Lukas and his team and see the research in action, including the precise instruments used, such as the NARDA SRM3000 spectrum analyzer, to measure EMF exposure from microwaves and Wi‑Fi signals.

A photograph of Eileen O’Connor, Director of the EM Radiation Research Trust, Sissel Halmøy, Chair of the International EMF Alliance, and Dr Margaritis at Athens University.

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Supporting Evidence 

To complement Dr Margaritis’ research, in January 2015, Professor Denis L. Henshaw presented Mobile Phones, Wi‑Fi and Other Wireless Devices: Are There Health Effects from Exposure? at the Chulabhorn Research Institute in Bangkok. His talk provides a broader overview of electromagnetic fields, biological effects and international exposure guidelines, reinforcing the relevance of laboratory findings like those seen in fruit fly oogenesis to real‑world exposure science.

Download Professor Denis Henshaw’s 2015 Chulabhorn Research Institute take here:

Professor Henshaw, is Emeritus Professor of Human Radiation Effects at the University of Bristol and has published widely on electromagnetic field interactions with biological systems.

Decades of Evidence, Still Ignored

For decades, science has shown that electromagnetic fields can harm cells, disrupt reproduction, and affect fundamental biological processes. Fruit flies reveal the story, and humans are not exempt. Human cryptochromes, proteins found in the eyes, brain, heart, liver, kidneys, lungs, and other tissues, are magneto‑sensitive. Our bodies can detect EMFs, just like fruit flies, and nearly all life on Earth shares this sensitivity.

Dr Lukas Margaritis, who passed away several years ago, provided groundbreaking evidence through his work on Drosophila oogenesis that EMFs can disrupt cell health and reproduction: 👉 PubMed Yet governments and industry continue to turn a blind eye. The effects are measurable. The risks are real. Learn more about this planetary threat 👉 here

Precaution is long overdue!

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