Cell proliferation in carcinogenesis
- PMID: 2204108
- DOI: 10.1126/science.2204108
Cell proliferation in carcinogenesis
Abstract
Chemicals that induce cancer at high doses in animal bioassays often fail to fit the traditional characterization of genotoxins. Many of these nongenotoxic compounds (such as sodium saccharin) have in common the property that they increase cell proliferation in the target organ. A biologically based, computerized description of carcinogenesis was used to show that the increase in cell proliferation can account for the carcinogenicity of nongenotoxic compounds. The carcinogenic dose-response relationship for genotoxic chemicals (such as 2-acetylaminofluorene) was also due in part to increased cell proliferation. Mechanistic information is required for determination of the existence of a threshold for the proliferative (and carcinogenic) response of nongenotoxic chemicals and the estimation of risk for human exposure.
Comment in
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Carcinogenesis models.Science. 1991 Jan 11;251(4990):142-4. Science. 1991. PMID: 1987635 No abstract available.
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