ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing catalytic polypeptide (APOBEC) is a family of highly efficient cytidine deaminase enzymes. APOBECs have been proven to deaminate cytidine on single-stranded DNA or RNA. Inducing the deamination of cytosine on the target gene into uracil, which exerts a variety of physiological functions, plays an important role in innate immunity, adaptive immunity, and antiviral. As the research progresses, APOBECs have been confirmed to be highly expressed in a variety of tumors, causing abnormal mutations in host genes, leading to inactivation of tumor suppressor genes or activation of proto-oncogenes, and their role in tumor development and as diagnostic and treatment markers gradually be found. CONCLUSION: This article will review the mechanism of APOBECs and their impact on tumor occurrence, development, diagnosis, and treatment, and provide a theoretical basis for future tumor treatment.