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Copyright (c) 2022 Yushi Lin, Fengmei Shi, Junyao Yan, Zhongyuan Sui, Bo Sun, Guangwei Xu
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
The undersigned hereby assign all rights, included but not limited to copyright, for this manuscript to CMB Association upon its submission for consideration to publication on Cellular and Molecular Biology. The rights assigned include, but are not limited to, the sole and exclusive rights to license, sell, subsequently assign, derive, distribute, display and reproduce this manuscript, in whole or in part, in any format, electronic or otherwise, including those in existence at the time this agreement was signed. The authors hereby warrant that they have not granted or assigned, and shall not grant or assign, the aforementioned rights to any other person, firm, organization, or other entity. All rights are automatically restored to authors if this manuscript is not accepted for publication.The Role of Exosome MicroRNA-103 in the Proliferation and Invasion of Hepatoma Cells and Its Mechanism
Corresponding Author(s) : Guangwei Xu
Cellular and Molecular Biology,
Vol. 68 No. 5: Issue 5
Abstract
Liver cancer (HCC) is a common malignant tumor whose incidence is increasing worldwide, but existing chemotherapeutic agents are not ideally effective drugs and have considerable resistance to chemotherapy. Exosome microRNA-103 plays an important role in the proliferation and invasion of liver cancer cells. The purpose of this article is to investigate the role and mechanism of exosome microRNA-103 in hepatocellular carcinoma cell proliferation and invasion. 84 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma diagnosed in a hospital from June 2017 to June 2020 were selected. The average age was 60.13±6.99 years. When the patient was fasting, 3 mL of peripheral venous blood was taken. And 50 healthy control groups were established, with an average age of 59.98±8.18 years old. 3 ml of peripheral venous blood was collected on an empty stomach to compare the cell proliferation rate and invasion rate. The results of the study showed that the number of stage III hepatocellular carcinoma cells invaded at 6h was 68.9, and it changed to 89.4 at 12h, and 106.4 at 24h; compared with that, the cell invasion rate in stage IV was higher. The number of stage IV hepatocellular carcinoma invasions at 6h was 68, which changed to 94.5 at 12h and 112.4 at 24h.
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