Toxicity and Carcinogenicity of Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT). 2016

Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
The Institute of Environmental Toxicology, 4321 Uchimoriya-machi, Joso-shi, Ibaraki 303-0043, Japan.

Dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) is still used in certain areas of tropics and subtropics to control malaria and other insect-transmitted diseases. DDT and its metabolites have been extensively studied for their toxicity and carcinogenicity in animals and humans and shown to have an endocrine disrupting potential affecting reproductive system although the effects may vary among animal species in correlation with exposure levels. Epidemiologic studies revealed either positive or negative associations between exposure to DDT and tumor development, but there has been no clear evidence that DDT causes cancer in humans. In experimental animals, tumor induction by DDT has been shown in the liver, lung, and adrenals. The mechanisms of hepatic tumor development by DDT have been studied in rats and mice. DDT is known as a non-genotoxic hepatocarcinogen and has been shown to induce microsomal enzymes through activation of constitutive androstane receptor (CAR) and to inhibit gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) in the rodent liver. The results from our previously conducted 4-week and 2-year feeding studies of p,p'-DDT in F344 rats indicate that DDT may induce hepatocellular eosinophilic foci as a result of oxidative DNA damage and leads them to hepatic neoplasia in combination with its mitogenic activity and inhibitory effect on GJIC. Oxidative stress could be a key factor in hepatocarcinogenesis by DDT.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
January 2004, Report on carcinogens : carcinogen profiles,
Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
February 1953, Pracovni lekarstvi,
Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
April 1951, Journal of the American Medical Association,
Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
January 2002, Report on carcinogens : carcinogen profiles,
Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
January 2013, Reproductive toxicology (Elmsford, N.Y.),
Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
April 1951, The New Orleans medical and surgical journal,
Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
February 2002, Environmental health perspectives,
Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
December 1947, Archives of dermatology and syphilology,
Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
August 1969, The American journal of pathology,
Takanori Harada, and Makio Takeda, and Sayuri Kojima, and Naruto Tomiyama
April 2015, Environment international,
Copied contents to your clipboard!