Paper
8 November 2010 Photonic homeostatics
Timon Cheng-Yi Liu, Fan-Hui Li
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Photonic homeostatics is a discipline to study the establishment, maintenance, decay, upgrading and representation of function-specific homoestasis (FSH) by using photonics. FSH is a negative-feedback response of a biosystem to maintain the function-specific fluctuations inside the biosystem so that the function is perfectly performed. A stress may increase sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) activities above FSH-specific SIRT1 activity to induce a function far from its FSH. On the one hand, low level laser irradiation or monochromatic light (LLL) can not modulate a function in its FSH or a stress in its stress-specific homeostasis (StSH), but modulate a function far from its FSH or a stress far from its StSH. On the other hand, the biophotons from a biosystem with its function in its FSH should be less than the one from the biosystem with its function far from its FSH. The non-resonant interaction of low intensity laser irradiation or monochromatic light (LIL) and a kind of membrane protein can be amplified by all the membrane proteins if the function is far from its FSH. This amplification might hold for biophoton emission of the membrane protein so that the photonic spectroscopy can be used to represent the function far from its FSH, which is called photonomics.
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Timon Cheng-Yi Liu and Fan-Hui Li "Photonic homeostatics", Proc. SPIE 7845, Optics in Health Care and Biomedical Optics IV, 78450Y (8 November 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.869918
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KEYWORDS
Proteins

Lithium

Diagnostics

Laser irradiation

Modulation

Tissues

Biomedical optics

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