The present Adverse Outcome Pathway (AOP) describes the linkage between lung cancer initiated from the Deposition of Energy (DoE) into a cell by a prototypic stressor such as radon gas. The multiple ionization events from DoE can directly break DNA double strands and initiate the activation of repair machinery through non-homologous end joining, an efficient, but error-prone process. When double strand breaks occur in DNA regions that transcribe critical genes, mutations generated by faulty repair may alter the function of these genes or cause chromosomal aberrations. These events alter the functions of many gene products and affect cell growth, cycling, and apoptosis. Cell proliferation is then promoted by escaping the regulatory control and forming hyperplasia in lung epithelial cells, leading eventually to lung cancer. Although the weight of evidence for this AOP is strong, uncertainties remain on dose-effect relationships across KEs, particularly for DoE delivered at low doses and dose-rates.
Adverse Outcome Pathway on deposition of energy leading to lung cancer
Working paper
Share
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Abstract
In the same series
-
30 June 2025193 Pages
-
Working paper30 June 2025250 Pages
-
30 June 2025329 Pages
-
Working paper30 June 2025270 Pages
-
Working paper26 June 202599 Pages
-
Working paper12 December 2023155 Pages
Related publications
-
Report
Assay for the Detection of Glucocorticoid Receptor Agonist and Antagonist Activity of Chemicals
2 July 202634 Pages -
Report2 July 202633 Pages
-
2 July 202620 Pages
-
2 July 202651 Pages
-
2 July 2026105 Pages
-
15 December 2025169 Pages