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Rita Nahta, Fahd Al-Mulla, Rabeah Al-Temaimi, Amedeo Amedei, Rafaela Andrade-Vieira, Sarah N. Bay, Dustin G. Brown, Gloria M. Calaf, Robert C. Castellino, Karine A. Cohen-Solal, Anna Maria Colacci, Nichola Cruickshanks, Paul Dent, Riccardo Di Fiore, Stefano Forte, Gary S. Goldberg, Roslida A. Hamid, Harini Krishnan, Dale W. Laird, Ahmed Lasfar, Paola A. Marignani, Lorenzo Memeo, Chiara Mondello, Christian C. Naus, Richard Ponce-Cusi, Jayadev Raju, Debasish Roy, Rabindra Roy, Elizabeth P. Ryan, Hosni K. Salem, A.Ivana Scovassi, Neetu Singh, Monica Vaccari, Renza Vento, Jan Vondráček, Mark Wade, Jordan Woodrick, William H. Bisson, Mechanisms of environmental chemicals that enable the cancer hallmark of evasion of growth suppression, Carcinogenesis, Volume 36, Issue Suppl_1, June 2015, Pages S2–S18, https://doi.org/10.1093/carcin/bgv028
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Abstract
As part of the Halifax Project, this review brings attention to the potential effects of environmental chemicals on important molecular and cellular regulators of the cancer hallmark of evading growth suppression. Specifically, we review the mechanisms by which cancer cells escape the growth-inhibitory signals of p53, retinoblastoma protein, transforming growth factor-beta, gap junctions and contact inhibition. We discuss the effects of selected environmental chemicals on these mechanisms of growth inhibition and cross-reference the effects of these chemicals in other classical cancer hallmarks.