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Potential role of extracellular vesicles in cisplatin resistance: Autophagy-related markers in extracellular vesicles of oral squamous cell carcinoma cells

thesis
posted on 2024-03-12, 13:22 authored by KAR YAN SU
Drug resistance is a critical problem in treating cancer. Recent research shows that the cellular process, autophagy, and nanoparticles known as extracellular vesicles contribute to resistance towards chemotherapies like cisplatin. This thesis investigates autophagy and extracellular vesicles in oral cancer cells, revealing that two specific proteins, ATG12 and LC3B, are associated with cisplatin resistance. Importantly, this thesis highlights the potential of LC3B protein in extracellular vesicles as a non-invasive predictive biomarker, which could lead to better tests to predict how effectively oral cancer patients respond to therapies. In future, these findings could improve treatments for oral cancer.

History

Campus location

Malaysia

Principal supervisor

Lee Wai Leng

Additional supervisor 1

Ian Charles Paterson

Additional supervisor 2

Goh Bey Hing

Additional supervisor 3

Chow Sek Chuen

Year of Award

2024

Department, School or Centre

School of Sciences (Monash University Malaysia)

Course

Doctor of Philosophy

Degree Type

DOCTORATE

Faculty

Faculty of Science

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