Forecast of actin-binding proteins as the oncotarget in osteosarcoma – A review of mechanism, diagnosis and therapy

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Abstract

Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common bone malignant tumor with a high rate of lung metastasis and principally emerges in children and adolescents. Although neoadjuvant chemotherapy is widely used around the world, a high rate of chemoresistance occurs and frequently generates a poor prognosis. Therefore, finding a new appropriate prognostic marker for OS is a valuable research direction, which will give patients a better chance to receive proper therapy. Actin-binding proteins (ABPs) are a group of proteins that interact with actin cytoskel­eton and play a crucial role in the regulation of the cell motility and morphology in eukaryotes. Meanwhile, ABPs also act as a bridge between the cytomembrane and nucleus, which trans­mit the outside-in and inside-out signals in cytoplasm. Furthermore, ABPs alter the dynamic structure of actin and regulate the invasion and metastasis of cancer. Hence, ABPs have a wide application in predicting the prognosis, and may be new targets, in tumor therapy. This review focuses on a series of ABPs and discusses their modulatory functions. It provides a new insight into the classification of ABPs’ functions in the process of invasion and metastasis in OS and illuminates the potential ability in predicting the prognosis of OS patients.

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Fu, Y., Yu, W., Cai, H., & Lu, A. (2018, March 20). Forecast of actin-binding proteins as the oncotarget in osteosarcoma – A review of mechanism, diagnosis and therapy. OncoTargets and Therapy. Dove Medical Press Ltd. https://doi.org/10.2147/OTT.S159894

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