AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent advancements in cancer research reveal that cancer results from DNA changes that switch cells from normal to abnormal, highlighting the critical role of carcinogenic chemicals.
  • Chemical carcinogens can cause mutations through direct DNA interaction or promote cancer through non-genotoxic mechanisms that require sustained cell growth.
  • Understanding these mechanisms informs better methods for evaluating and regulating chemicals, ultimately impacting cancer risk management and testing protocols.

Article Abstract

Developments in the understanding of the etiology of cancer have profound implications for the way the carcinogenicity of chemicals is addressed. This paper proposes a unified theory of carcinogenesis that will illuminate better ways to evaluate and regulate chemicals. In the last four decades, we have come to understand that for a cell and a group of cells to begin the process of unrestrained growth that is defined as cancer, there must be changes in DNA that reprogram the cell from normal to abnormal. Cancer is the consequence of DNA coding errors that arise either directly from mutagenic events or indirectly from cell proliferation especially if sustained. Chemicals that act via direct interaction with DNA can induce cancer because they cause mutations which can be carried forward in dividing cells. Chemicals that act via non-genotoxic mechanisms must be dosed to maintain a proliferative environment so that the steps toward neoplasia have time to occur. Chemicals that induce increased cellular proliferation can be divided into two categories: those which act by a cellular receptor to induce cellular proliferation, and those which act via non-specific mechanisms such as cytotoxicity. This knowledge has implications for testing chemicals for carcinogenic potential and risk management.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.yrtph.2019.01.021DOI Listing

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