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If DNA does indeed have an electromagnetic signature this could make it

vulnerable to very low energy EMF fields.

..

DNA Sequence Reconstituted from Water Memory?

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> The Institute of Science in Society

> Science Society Sustainability

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> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/DNA_sequence_reconstituted_from_Water_Memory.php

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> ========================================================

> ISIS Report 20/07/11

>

> DNA Sequence Reconstituted from Water Memory?

> ########################################

>

> Water carrying only the electromagnetic signature of a DNA sequence can

> make a

> replica of the sequence out of simple building blocks, according to Nobel

> laureate HIV researcher. Dr. Mae-Wan Ho

>

> When Noble laureate HIV researcher Luc Montagnier discovered that certain

> bacterial and viral DNA sequences dissolved in water causes

> electromagnetic

> signals to be emitted at high dilutions, that was bad enough (see [1, 2]

> 'Homeopathic' Signals from DNA and Electromagnetic Signals from HIV, SiS

> 48).

> Now, new results from his lab appear to show that the DNA sequence itself

> could

> be reconstituted from the electromagnetic signal. That has so stunned the

> scientific community that one prominent supporter was nonetheless moved to

> remark: " Luc is either a genius or he is mad! " But some quantum physicists

> are

> taking that very seriously, and are linking Montagnier's findings to

> decades of

> research demonstrating the sensitivity of organisms to extremely weak

> electromagnetic fields.

>

> A story that goes back ten years

>

> Luc Montagnier tells the story that began 10 years ago when he discovered

> the

> strange behaviour of a small bacterium, Mycoplasm pirum, a frequent

> companion to

> human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection; and like the HIV, has

> special

> affinity for the human lymphocytes (white blood cells) [3]. He was trying

> to

> separate the bacterium of about 300 nm from the virus particles of about

> 120 nm

> using filters of pore size 100 nm and 20 nm, starting with pure cultures

> of the

> bacterium on lymphocytes.

>

> The filtrate (solution that went through the filter) was sterile, and no

> bacterium grew in a rich culture medium that would normally support its

> growth.

> Furthermore, polymerase chain reactions (PCR) based on primers (short

> starting

> sequences) derived from adhesin, a gene of the bacterium that had been

> cloned

> and sequenced, failed to detect any DNA in the filtrate.

>

> But, to Montagnier's surprise, when the filtrate was incubated with

> lymphocytes

> that were not infected with Mycoplasm (according to the most stringent

> tests),

> the bacterium was regularly recovered.

>

> So, was there some information in the filtrate responsible for directing

> the

> synthesis of the bacterium? That marked the beginning of a long series of

> investigations on how DNA behaves in water, which led to the discovery

> that the

> M. pirum DNA was emitting low frequency electromagnetic waves in some

> diluted

> solutions of the filtrate in water, and this property of M. pirum DNA was

> soon

> extended to other bacterial and viral DNA [1, 2].

>

> The instrument used to detect the electromagnetic (EM) signals consists of

> a

> solenoid (a coil of wire) that detects the magnetic component of the waves

> produced by the DNA solution in a plastic tube as it induces an electric

> current

> in the wire. This current is amplified and analysed in a laptop computer

> using

> special software, and the resultant signals plotted out on the computer

> screen.

>

> Read the rest of this report here

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/DNA_sequence_reconstituted_from_Water_Memory.php

>

> Or read other articles about water here

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/SO_water.php

> ========================================================

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>

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