Abstract
In recent decades, “environmental xenobiotic-mediated endocrine disruption”, especially by xeno-estrogens, has gained a lot of interest from toxicologists and environmental researchers. These estrogen-mimicking chemicals are known to cause various human disorders. Pesticides are the most heavily used harmful xenobiotic chemicals around the world. The estrogen-mimicking potential of the most widely used organochlorine pesticides is well established. However, their effect is not as clearly understood among the plethora of effects these persistent xenobiotics are known to pose on our physiological system. Estrogens are one of the principal risk modifiers of various disorders, including cancer, not only in women but in men as well. Despite the ban on these xenobiotics in some parts of the world, humans are still at apparent risk of exposure to these harmful chemicals as they are still widely persistent and likely to stay in our environment for a long time owing to their high chemical stability. The present work intends to understand how these harmful chemicals may affect the risk of the development of estrogen-mediated human cancer.
Subject
Pollution,Pharmacology,Toxicology
Reference110 articles.
1. Xenobiotics in the environment: Present and future strategies to obviate the problem of biological persistence;J. Biotechnol.,2002
2. Membrane Hormone Receptors and Their Signaling Pathways as Targets for Endocrine Disruptors;J. Xenobiot.,2022
3. Wang, L.H., Chen, L.R., and Chen, K.H. (2021). In vitro and vivo identification, metabolism and action of xenoestrogens: An overview. Int. J. Mol. Sci., 22.
4. Concentration and influence factors of organochlorine pesticides in atmospheric particles in a coastal island in Fujian, Southeast China;Aerosol Air Qual. Res.,2018
5. Distribution of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane and hexachlorocyclohexane in urban soils and risk assessment;J. Xenobiot.,2013
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献