Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0006142 (breast cancer)
160,383 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Galectin-3 is a Mr 30,000 protein with carbohydrate-binding specificity for type I and II ABH blood group epitopes and polylactosamine glycans expressed on cell surface and extracellular matrix glycoproteins such as laminin. Cell lines propagated from human normal mammary epithelia and from benign or infiltrating components of primary breast tumours express low levels of galectin-3 in the cytoplasm. However, galectin-3 when added exogenously in solution or when bound within a three-dimensional matrix markedly enhanced the migration of the primary tumour cell lines through a Matrigel barrier. Galectin-3 expression in the cytoplasm and intercellularly on surface membranes was greatly increased in cell lines propagated from malignant ascites and pleural effusions of late stage breast cancer. These cell lines were non-invasive in the Matrigel assay and exogenous galectin-3 had no enhancing effect on invasiveness. These results suggest that galectin-3 could play multiple roles in cell metastasis at an early invasive stage by acting in a paracrine manner to stimulate cell migration through an extracellular matrix, and in later stage cancers in synergy with other mediators of cell-cell aggregation. However, endogenous galectin-3 expression in human breast cancers is not correlated directly with their invasive potential in vitro.
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PMID:Effects of the carbohydrate-binding protein galectin-3 on the invasiveness of human breast carcinoma cells. 864 22

Galectin-3, a member of the beta-galactoside-binding lectin family, is involved in several biological events including binding to the basement membrane glycoprotein laminin. Although the exact role of galectin-3 during the interactions between cells and laminin is not yet known, it has recently been observed that its expression is down-regulated at both the protein and the mRNA level in colon cancer tissues in correlation with progression of the disease. This study investigated the possibility that breast cancer cells might also exhibit decreased galectin-3 expression in association with their aggressiveness. The expression of galectin-3 was examined by immunoperoxidase staining, using a polyclonal antibody raised against recombinant galectin-3, in a collection of 98 human breast lesions including 12 fibroadenomas, 15 fibrocystic disease lesions, 22 in situ carcinomas, and 49 infiltrating ductal carcinomas, 19 of which had positive axillary lymph nodes. Normal breast tissue adjacent to the lesions was present in 59 biopsies. Normal breast tissue expressed high levels (3+) of galectin-3. High expression (2+ to 3+) was also found in most benign lesions examined. The expression of galectin-3 was significantly decreased in in situ carcinoma and this down-regulation was more pronounced in invasive ductal carcinoma, particularly when associated with infiltration of axillary lymph nodes. These data constitute the first observation that galectin-3 is down-regulated in breast cancer and suggest the decreased expression of this galactoside-binding lectin is associated with the acquisition of the invasive and metastatic phenotype.
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PMID:Decreased expression of galectin-3 is associated with progression of human breast cancer. 869 44

Galectins (S-type lectins) are a family of low-molecular weight, calcium-independent, mannose-binding lectins with functions in cell growth, cell activation, cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion including binding to carcinoembryonic antigens and laminin and metalloproteinase. Anti-galectin antisera can inhibit metastases of rat prostate cancers and human melanomas. To define the role of galectins in human breast cancer, the expression of galectin-3 were determined in 27 invasive breast cancers by immunohistochemical methods. The histologic grades of excised breast cancers were determined and immunohistochemical staining for galectin-3 (1: 1000 dilution of anti-galectin rat polyclonal antibody) was defined by scoring the intensity and distribution of staining (0-3+). The mean age of breast cancer patients was 63 years for 20 grade II breast cancers and 56 years for 7 grade III breast cancers. The mean immunohistochemical staining score for grade II breast cancers was 3. 7 (20% less than 2, 80% 3-6) and 2.5 for grade III (71.4% less than 2 and 28.6% 3-6). The galectin-3 expression pattern suggests that increasing histologic grade of breast cancer leads to reduced expression of galectin-3 and possibly reduced matrix binding and increased cancer cell motility.
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PMID:Galectin-3 expression in human breast carcinoma: correlation with cancer histologic grade. 959 87

Galectin-3 is a galactoside binding protein found at elevated levels in a wide variety of neoplastic cells and thought to be involved in cognitive cellular interactions during transformation and metastasis. Previously, we have shown that introduction of human galectin-3 (Mr 31,000) cDNA into the human breast cancer cells BT-549 which are galectin-3 null and non-tumorigenic in nude mice resulted in the establishment of four galectin-3 expressing clones. Three of them acquired tumorigenicity when inoculated in the mammary fat pad of nude mice. Here, we questioned what is the molecular difference between the nude mouse tumorigenic and non-tumorigenic galectin-3 expressing BT-549 cell clones. Differential display analysis and Northern blotting revealed that, unlike the tumorigenic clones, neither the parental cells nor the non-tumorigenic clone expressed a 6.5 Kb transcript. A 607 bp PCR (polymerase chain reaction) product from the differentially displayed mRNA revealed a 93% sequence homology with the human L1 retrotransposon previously suggested to play a role in the pathobiology of some breast cancers. In addition, we show that the two gene products, i.e., galectin-3 and L1, are co-expressed in breast carcinoma specimens and in other nude mouse tumorigenic cell lines.
Breast Cancer Res Treat 1998 May
PMID:Galectin-3 and L1 retrotransposons in human breast carcinomas. 969

Protein (lectin)-carbohydrate (cellular glycoconjugate) recognition is operative in biochemical information transfer. Galectins constitute a family of endogenous galactoside-binding lectins with conserved features in the binding site. The members of this lectin category are assumed to be involved in cell adhesion and growth regulation. To assess to what extent the different modes of binding-site presentation and/or carbohydrate fine-specificities will affect aspects of galectin behavior, homodimeric cross-linking galectin-1 and monomeric chimeric galectin-3, with its collagenase-sensitive stalk linked to the carbohydrate-recognition domain, were investigated. Cell-surface expression of the two galectins and accessible galectin-binding sites on various tumor cell lines was ascertained by FACScan analysis. In particular, ligand accessibility for the two galectins differed for the tested cell line types. Binding of tumor cells to laminin and plasma or placental fibronectin was generally reduced by treatment of cells or matrix with galectins. Galectin-3 was more efficient than galectin 1 at impairing laminin's potency as matrix. Cell binding of galectin-1, on the other hand, proved on average more effective for blocking cell association to fibronectins after its preincubation with cell suspensions. Differences were also apparent in the biodistribution of the galectins, where an avian homolog of galectin- served as the control to distinguish effects of spatial and sugar-binding features. Histopathological analysis of lymph-node-negative and -positive breast and colorectal carcinomas (n = 180 including 60 metastatic lesions) indicated a correlation of either increased galectin-1 binding and reduced galectin-3 expression or reduced binding of both galectins with the occurrence of lymph node lesions. Together with data on the heparin-binding lectin, revealing reduced expression to be associated with a positive lymph-node status in the breast cancer group, these results can be interpreted to reflect cell-type-dependent requirements of galectin ligand presentation during the metastatic cascade. By introducing mammalian lectins to lectin-histochemical studies, the detection of quantitative differences in glycosylation brings an understanding of its cell biological significance one step closer.
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PMID:Galectins-1 and -3 and their ligands in tumor biology. Non-uniform properties in cell-surface presentation and modulation of adhesion to matrix glycoproteins for various tumor cell lines, in biodistribution of free and liposome-bound galectins and in their expression by breast and colorectal carcinomas with/without metastatic propensity. 1048 Mar 38

Both the ability of malignant cells to form multicellular aggregates via homotypic or heterotypic aggregation and their adhesion to the endothelium are important if not critical during early stages of cancer metastasis. The tumor-associated carbohydrate Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen (T antigen) and beta-galactoside binding lectins (galectins) have been implicated in tumor cell adhesion and tissue invasion. In this study, we demonstrate the involvement of T antigen in both homotypic aggregation of MDA-MB-435 human breast carcinoma cells and their adhesion to the endothelium. The T antigen-specific peptide P-30 (HGRFILPWWYAFSPS) selected from a bacteriophage display library was able to inhibit spontaneous homotypic aggregation of MDA-MB-435 cells up to 74% in a dose-dependent manner. Because T antigen has beta-galactose as a terminal sugar, the expression profile of beta-galactoside-binding lectins (galectins) in MDA-MB-435 cells was studied. Our data indicated the abundant expression of [35S]methionine/cysteine-labeled galectin-1 and galectin-3 in this cell line, which suggested possible interactions between galectins and T antigen. As revealed by laser confocal microscopy, both galectin-1 and galectin-3 also participate in the adhesion of the MDA-MB-435 cells to the endothelium. We observed the clustering of galectin-3 on endothelial cells at the sites of the contact with tumor cells, consistent with its possible interaction with T antigen on cancer cells The galectin-1 signal, however, strongly accumulated at the sites of cell-cell contacts predominantly on tumor cells. The T antigen-specific P-30 significantly (50%) inhibited this adhesion, which indicated that T antigen participates in the adhesion of MDA-MB-435 breast cancer cells to the endothelium. The ability of synthetic P-30 to inhibit both the spontaneous homotypic aggregation of MDA-MB-435 cells and their adhesion to the endothelium (>70 and 50%, respectively) suggests its potential functional significance for antiadhesive therapy of cancer metastasis.
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PMID:Effects of Thomsen-Friedenreich antigen-specific peptide P-30 on beta-galactoside-mediated homotypic aggregation and adhesion to the endothelium of MDA-MB-435 human breast carcinoma cells. 1082 25

Galectin-3, a multifunctional beta-galactocide binding lectin possibly participates in a variety of biological events including cell proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. The implication of galectin-3 during malignancy progression has been suggested in several cancers, including colon, prostate, thyroid, and breast cancer, however, scarce data are available in gastric cancer. We examined the expression of galectin-3 in 86 primary gastric cancers and the 40 metastatic lymph nodes by immunohistochemistry to explore whether it is related to the malignant progression. Positive galectin-3 expression was observed in 84% of the gastric cancer cases. In enhanced cells of cancerous lesions, 48% showed stronger nuclear immunoreactivity than cytoplasmic one, whereas adjacent epithelial cells showed little or weak nuclear immunoreactivity. When galectin-3 expression in gastric carcinoma was compared with that in gastric tissues adjacent to the cancers, there was a significant difference. The degree of enhancement of immunoreactivity was different corresponding to various histopathological subtypes in cancer tissues. A significantly stronger expression of galectin-3 in cancer tissues was only observed in papillary and poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma. When galectin-3 expression and tumor progression (TNM staging) was compared, a significant correlation was observed in overall cases, and only in poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma the galectin-3 expression correlated with tumor progression among various subtypes. Galectin-3 expression was observed significantly stronger in metastatic lymph nodes than in the primary gastric cancers, and also in these cases among histological subtypes, only in poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma, the expression of galectin-3 in metastatic lymph nodes was stronger than the primary cancer. In conclusion galectin-3 might be a useful tumor marker for gastric cancers with respects to tumor progression and potentiality of lymph node metastasis especially in certain histological types of gastric cancer.
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PMID:Increased expression of galectin-3 in primary gastric cancer and the metastatic lymph nodes. 1237 39

The expression of transcripts for anti-apoptotic (survivin, survivin-deltaEx3, survivin-2B, galectin-3, bag-1 and bcl-2) and pro-apoptotic (bax-alpha) genes, and for multiple drug resistance related protein-1 (MRP-1) gene were investigated, using RT-PCR, in 106 breast tumour biopsies. Normal breast tissue was also analysed for comparative purposes. Overall, survivin, survivin-deltaEx3, survivin-2B, bcl-2, bag-1, galectin-3, bax-alpha and MRP-1 mRNAs were detected in 68, 54.7, 9.4, 78.4, 80.9, 98.9, 97.8 and 72.8%, respectively, of tumour specimens. Uniquely among the mRNAs analysed, the expression of bcl-2 correlated significantly with disease outcome, with bcl-2 expression indicative of favourable outcome in terms of both relapse-free survival and overall survival. This suggests that bcl-2 mRNA expression may be a key prognostic marker for breast cancer and that routine analysis of expression of this transcript should be considered. The results from this study suggest, however, that the expression of survivin, survivin-deltaEx3, survivin-2B, bag-1, galectin-3, bax-alpha and MRP-1 mRNAs cannot be considered as prognostic indicators of disease outcome for patients with breast cancer.
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PMID:Lack of prognostic significance of survivin, survivin-deltaEx3, survivin-2B, galectin-3, bag-1, bax-alpha and MRP-1 mRNAs in breast cancer. 1460 38

To define the role of galectin-3 in breast cancer progression, we have used a novel three-dimensional co-culture system that recapitulates in vivo reciprocal functional breast epithelial-endothelial cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions, and examined the expression of galectin-3 mRNA and protein in human breast tumors and xenografts. Galectin-3 is required for the stabilization of epithelial-endothelial interaction networks because immunoneutralization with galectin-3 antibodies abolishes the interactions in a dose-dependent manner. Co-culture of epithelial cells with endothelial cells results in increase in levels of secreted galectin-3 and presence of proteolytically processed form of galectin-3 in the conditioned media. In contrast, intracellular galectin-3 predominantly exists in the intact form. This difference in sensitivity to proteolytic processing of secreted versus intracellular galectin-3 probably arises from differences in accessibility of protease-sensitive sites, levels, and/or type of activated protease(s), and may be indicative of different functional roles for intact and processed galectin-3. To determine whether the proteolytically cleaved galectin-3 retains its ability to bind to endothelial cells, binding assays were performed with the full-length and matrix metallopeoteinase-2-cleaved recombinant galectin-3. Although a dose-dependent increase in binding to human umbilical vein endothelial cells was observed with both full-length and cleaved galectin-3, proteolytically cleaved galectin-3 displayed approximately 20-fold higher affinity for human umbilical vein endothelial cells as compared to the full-length protein. Examination of galectin-3 expression in breast tumors and xenografts revealed elevated levels of galectin-3 mRNA and protein in the luminal epithelial cells of normal and benign ducts, down-regulation in early grades of ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), and re-expression in peripheral tumor cells as DCIS lesions progressed to comedo-DCIS and invasive carcinomas. These data suggest that galectin-3 expression is associated with specific morphological precursor subtypes of breast cancer and undergoes a transitional shift in expression from luminal to peripheral cells as tumors progressed to comedo-DCIS or invasive carcinomas. Such a localized expression of galectin-3 in cancer cells proximal to the stroma could lead to increased invasive potential by inducing novel or better interactions with the stromal counterparts.
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PMID:Alterations in galectin-3 expression and distribution correlate with breast cancer progression: functional analysis of galectin-3 in breast epithelial-endothelial interactions. 1557 37

Galectin-3 (Gal-3), a pleiotropic carbohydrate-binding protein, is a selective binding partner of activated K-Ras-GTP. Because both proteins are antiapoptotic and associated with cancer progression, we questioned the possible functional role of Gal-3 in K-Ras activation. We found that overexpression of Gal-3 in human breast cancer cells (BT-549/Gal-3) coincided with a significant increase in wild-type (wt) K-Ras-GTP coupled with loss in wt N-Ras-GTP, whereas the nononcogenic Gal-3 mutant proteins [Gal-3(S6E) and Gal-3(G182A)] failed to induce the Ras isoform switch. Only wt Gal-3 protein coimmunoprecipitated and colocalized with oncogenic K-Ras, resulting in its activation with radical alterations in Ras signaling pathway, whereby the activation of AKT and Ral was suppressed and shifted to the activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). Specific inhibitors for Ras or mitogen-activated protein/ERK kinase (farnesylthiosalicylic acid and UO126, respectively) inhibited Gal-3-mediated apoptotic resistance and anchorage-independent growth functions. In conclusion, this study shows that Gal-3 confers on BT-549 human breast carcinoma cells several oncogenic functions by binding to and activation of wt K-Ras, suggesting that some of the molecular functions of Gal-3 are, at least in part, a result of K-Ras activation.
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PMID:Galectin-3 regulates a molecular switch from N-Ras to K-Ras usage in human breast carcinoma cells. 1610 80


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