About 80% of malignant mesotheliomas (MM) in the Western World develop  in individuals with higher than background exposure to asbestos. Only a  fraction of those exposed to asbestos develop mesothelioma, indicating  that additional factors play a role. Simian virus 40 (SV40), a DNA tumor  virus that preferentially causes mesothelioma in hamsters, has been  detected in several human mesotheliomas. The expression of the SV40  large tumor antigen in mesothelioma cells, and not in nearby stromal  cells, and the capacity of antisense T-antigen treatment to arrest  mesothelioma cell growth in vitro suggest that SV40 contributes to tumor  development. The capacity of T-antigen to bind and inhibit cellular p53  and retinoblastoma (Rb)-family proteins in mesothelioma, together with  the very high susceptibility of human mesothelial cells to SV40-mediated  transformation in vitro, supports a causative role of SV40 in the  pathogenesis of mesothelioma. Asbestos appears to increase SV40-mediated  transformation of human mesothelial cells in vitro, suggesting that  asbestos and SV40 may be cocarcinogens. p53 mutations are rarely found  in mesothelioma; p16, p14ARF, and NF2 mutations/losses are frequent.  Recent studies revealed the existence of a genetic factor that  predisposes affected individuals to mesothelioma in the villages of  Karain and Tuzkoy, in Anatolia, Turkey. Erionite, a type of zeolite, may  be a cofactor in these same villages, where 50% of deaths are caused by  mesothelioma. Mesothelioma appears to have a complex etiology in which  environmental carcinogens (asbestos and erionite), ionizing radiation,  viruses, and genetic factors act alone or in concert to cause  malignancy. Semin Oncol 29:2-17. Copyright © 2002 by W.B. Saunders  Company.
source : http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0093775402500543 
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