“…Consumer products including detergents, surfactants, resins, lubricants, plasticizers, fire retardants, and pesticides have been identified as sources of xenoestrogens, and scrutiny has focused on chemical classes such as alkyl phenols and esters of parahydroxybenzoic acid, phthalates, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, organophosphates, chlorinated hydrocarbons, and biphenyls (Shanle and Xu, 2011). Although many xenoestrogens exhibit low binding affinities to the nuclear ERs and often require relatively high concentrations ($1 mM) to affect genomic pathways, recent studies have focused on xenoestrogen effects on rapid nongenomic signaling pathways where significantly more potent, low-dose effects have been observed, including those that involve GPER-mediated processes (Thomas and Dong, 2006;Shanle and Xu, 2011;Marino et al, 2012;Watson et al, 2012Watson et al, , 2014.…”