Abstract

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) chronically infects approximately 170 million people worldwide and is a known etiological agent of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The molecular mechanisms of HCV-mediated carcinogenesis are not fully understood. This review article focuses on the oncogenic potential of NS3, a viral protein with transformative effects on cells, although the precise mechanisms remain elusive. Unlike the more extensively studied Core and NS5A proteins, NS3's roles in cancer development are less defined but critical. Research indicates that NS3 is implicated in several carcinogenic processes such as proliferative signaling, cell death resistance, genomic instability and mutations, invasion and metastasis, tumor-related inflammation, immune evasion, and replicative immortality. Understanding the direct impact of viral proteins such as NS3 on cellular transformation is crucial for elucidating HCV's role in HCC development. Overall, this review sheds light on the molecular mechanisms used by NS3 to contribute to hepatocarcinogenesis, and highlights its significance in the context of HCV-associated HCC, underscoring the need for further investigation into its specific molecular and cellular actions.

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