balder
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Naked mole rats have some type of double contact inhibition and it is very difficult for them to get cancer...
I wonder if their hairlessness is a product of that type of contact inhibition?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naked_mole_rat
S Foote. said:Contact inhibition will only effect enlarging follicles in early anagen. If the pressure increases around a follicle just after it has reached full anagen growth, it will take years before this follicle cycles again and "then" becomes effected.
Just to clarify a couple of points. it is not the fluid pressure "itself" that directly acts on follicles. The basic physics here is that enlarging anagen follicles have to push the surrounding dermal tissue away in order to enlarge. The anagen hair follicle is an enlarging pocket in dermal tissue.
The greater the tissue fluid pressure, the greater the force behind the dermal cells, that would naturaly try to fill any hollow space in the tissue. The greater this resistence to follicle expansion, the earlier normal contact inhibition will turn off anagen enlargement, and miniaturised follicles result.
Naked mole rats have some type of double contact inhibition and it is very difficult for them to get cancer...
I wonder if their hairlessness is a product of that type of contact inhibition?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naked_mole_rat
Naked mole rats appear to have a high resistance to cancer; cancer has never been observed in them. The mechanism that stunts cancer is a gene called p16, known as an "over-crowding" gene, which prevents the creation of new cells once a group of cells reaches a certain size. Most mammals, including naked mole rats, have a gene called p27 which does a similar task, but prevents cellular reproduction at a much later point than p16 does. The combination of p16 and p27 in naked mole rats creates a double-layered barrier that prevents the formation of cancer cells.[12] Hypersensitivity to contact inhibition may be the reason for the cancer resistance of the naked mole rat.[13]