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Pathogenicity of the MAGE family (Review)

Sanyan Li, Xiang Shi, Jingping Li, Xianrong Zhou

2021Oncology Letters26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The melanoma antigen gene (MAGE) protein family is a group of highly conserved proteins that share a common homology domain. Under normal circumstances, numerous MAGE proteins are only expressed in reproduction-related tissues; however, abnormal expression levels are observed in a variety of tumor tissues. The MAGE family consists of type I and II proteins, several of which are cancer-testis antigens that are highly expressed in cancer and serve a critical role in tumorigenesis. Therefore, this review will use the relationship between MAGEs and tumors as a starting point, focusing on the latest developments regarding the function of MAGEs as oncogenes, and preliminarily reveal their possible mechanisms.

Topics & Concepts

OncogeneCarcinogenesisBiologyGeneCancerGene familyAntigenProtein familyHomology (biology)GeneticsEpigeneticsMolecular medicineCell cycleCancer researchComputational biologyGenomeImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesUbiquitin and proteasome pathwaysGlycosylation and Glycoproteins Research
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