“…The BST2 gene is widely expressed in numerous cells, including hepatocytes, plasma blast cells, early plasma cells, mature B cells, dendritic cells, pneumocytes, monocytes, pancreatic cells, kidney cells and vascular endothelial cells, suggesting that it plays vital roles in the innate immune response against viral infection and other physiological processes ( 2 , 5 – 7 ). An increasing number of studies have shown that BST2 upregulation is associated with numerous types of cancer, such as multiple myeloma ( 8 , 9 ), endometrial cancer ( 10 ), gastric cancer ( 11 ), glioblastoma multiforme ( 12 ), primary lung cancer ( 13 ), nasopharyngeal cancer ( 14 ), oral cavity cancer ( 15 ), oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) ( 16 ), cervical cancer ( 17 ), breast cancer ( 18 ), pancreatic cancer ( 19 ), hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) ( 20 ), colorectal cancer ( 21 , 22 ), head and neck squamous cell carcinoma ( 23 ), ovarian cancer ( 24 ), esophageal squamous cell carcinoma ( 22 ) and bladder cancer ( 25 ). The role and molecular mechanism of high BST2 expression have been investigated in several types of cancer; however, a review of the molecular mechanism of BST2 in these cancers not been reported.…”