Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P17931 (galectin-3)
2,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Galectin-3 was primarily reported to be a marker distinguishing thyroid adenomas and carcinomas. To check the usefulness of anti-galectin-3 immunohistochemistry, we studied its expression in 42 follicular adenomas and 42 follicular carcinomas. Eight cases out of 42 follicular adenomas (19%) presented focal or diffuse galectin-3 immunoexpression. From 42 cases of follicular carcinomas, six cases did not present galectin-3 immunopositivity at all. Three of these cases were widely invasive (one with focal anaplastic feature and one oxyphilic), and three other ones were minimally invasive. Two other carcinoma cases had only small foci positive with galectin-3 antibody, thirteen cases presented positivity mostly restricted to peripheral part of the tumor and 21 cases possessed diffuse, strong reaction. Two adenomas presented galectin-3 positive foci, and these cells had light nuclear changes superficially suggesting follicular variant of papillary carcinoma, mostly because of nuclear clearing. In these tumors, adenoma diagnosis was supported by experts, but we can not exclude that they represent early phase of malignisation, although such theory needs to be prooved. Our study does not allow to use galectin-3 as a highly specific marker, differentiating between follicular benign and malignant tumor, although it may be used as an additive tool.
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PMID:Usefulness of galectin-3 immunohistochemistry in differential diagnosis between thyroid follicular carcinoma and follicular adenoma. 1457 19

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.
Cancer Lett 2003 Nov 25
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

Galectin-3 has been extensively studied as an immunohistochemical marker of thyroid malignancy, and a high diagnostic accuracy has been reported even for difficult pathological diagnoses, such as minimal invasive follicular carcinoma. We consequently hypothesized that the quantitative analysis of galectin-3 mRNA rather than the more observer-dependent immunohistological determination might enhance the diagnostic workup of ambiguous thyroid lesions. In the present study, we set out to validate this approach by analyzing concomitantly the expression and production of galectin-3 in benign and malignant thyroid tumors by means of quantitative PCR and immunohistochemistry. Twenty-eight benign and 31 malignant thyroid samples were quantified by real-time PCR for the mRNA levels of galectin-3 and thyroglobulin. Galectin-3 protein expression was examined by immunohistochemistry in 13 benign and 14 malignant thyroid samples. There was a significant increase in galectin-3 at both the mRNA (12/20) and protein levels in papillary cancer (8/8), although the mRNA values overlapped partly with benign lesions. Surprisingly, only a focal and discrete galectin-3 immunoreactivity was seen in follicular cancer (1/5); no augmentation of the mRNA was found. The expression of the thyroid-specific gene thyroglobulin was highly variable in benign and malignant thyroid tissue. These results suggest that the quantitative measurement of galactin-3 mRNA is unlikely to be clinically useful and underscore the need for searching for novel markers for thyroid malignancies.
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PMID:Expression of galectin-3 in normal and malignant thyroid tissue by quantitative PCR and immunohistochemistry. 1461 51

It is well established that after metastatic cancer cells escape the primary tumour and enter the circulation, their interactions with microvascular endothelium of a target organ constitute an essential rate-limiting step in haematogenous cancer metastasis. However, the physiological and biochemical processes supporting neoplastic cell arrest and retention in the microcirculation are still poorly understood. In this study, we present experimental evidence that microvascular endothelium of metastasis-prone tissues undergoes activation in response to desialylated cancer-associated carbohydrate structures such as Thomsen-Friedenreich (TF) antigen (Galbeta1-3GalNAc) expressed on circulating glycoproteins and neoplastic cells. The metastasis-associated endothelium activation, manifested by marked increase in endothelial cell surface galectin-3 expression, causes gradual decrease in cancer cell velocities (from 72 x 10(2)+/- 33 x 10(2) microm s-1 to 7.6 x 10(2)+/- 1.9 x 10(2) microm s-1, mean +/-s.d.) accompanied by a corresponding increase in the percentage of rolling cells (from 3.3%+/- 1.2% to 24.3%+/- 3.6%, mean +/-s.d.), and results in human breast and prostate carcinoma cell arrest and retention in the microvasculature. This process, which could be of high importance in haematogenous cancer metastasis, was inhibited efficiently by an anti-TF antigen function-blocking antibody. Carbohydrate-mediated endothelial activation could be a process of physiological significance as it probably occurs in the interactions between a variety of circulating constituents and the vessel wall.
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PMID:Evidence of porcine and human endothelium activation by cancer-associated carbohydrates expressed on glycoproteins and tumour cells. 1467 94

N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide (HPMA)-based copolymers have been shown to be efficient carriers for anticancer drugs because of their versatile chemistry and good biocompatibility. As demonstrated with hepatocytes, targeting efficacy of anticancer drugs could be further improved when the drug (doxorubicin) was conjugated to HPMA copolymers with biorecognisable groups, such as simple carbohydrates. The present study was devised to learn whether the cluster (multivalent) construction of carbohydrate residues could improve the targeting capability of HPMA copolymer-doxorubicin (DOX) conjugates towards human colon adenocarcinoma cells. DOX was linked via a lysosomally degradable tetrapeptide sequence to HPMA copolymers bearing galactosamine (GalN), lactose (Lac), or multivalent galactose residues (TriGal) to produce targetable polymeric drug carriers. The effect of the type of sugar moiety and its three-dimensional cluster arrangement on biorecognition by three human colon-adenocarcinoma cell lines was studied. The role of galectin-3 in the biorecognition of HPMA copolymer conjugates was explored. Biorecognition of the targetable (glycoside-bearing) conjugates decreased their IC(50) doses in comparison to the non-targetable (non-glycosylated) conjugates. The biorecognition of the TriGal-containing HPMA copolymer-doxorubicin conjugate by the cells was superior with concomitant decrease of its IC(50) doses. It is suggested that the increased cytotoxicity of the glycosylated HPMA-copolymer-DOX conjugates toward human colon-adenocarcinoma cells was caused by their biorecognition and effective internalisation via receptor-mediated endocytosis. All three human colon adenocarcinoma cell lines tested, Colo-205, SW-480 and SW-620, expressed the galectin-3 protein and the galectin-3-specific RNA. However, contrary to expectation, Colo-205 cells did not express a detectable amount of galectin-3 on the cell surface. This suggests that the binding of the glycoside-bearing HPMA copolymer-DOX conjugates to the cells was mediated not only by galectin-3. We conclude that targeting of the anticancer agent, doxorubicin, using HPMA copolymer conjugates bearing multivalent galactoside residues can improve their cytotoxicity.
Eur J Cancer 2004 Jan
PMID:Design of a multivalent galactoside ligand for selective targeting of HPMA copolymer-doxorubicin conjugates to human colon cancer cells. 1468 99

A large body of literature has examined and described galectin expression in cancer. Discrepancies have been observed in the reported data, which hampered clear understanding of the expression profiles. This relates to the use of different types of methods that evaluate either global or specific gene expression in heterogeneous cancer tissue samples, type of antibodies used in immunohistochemistry and procedures of comparison of gene expression. In this manuscript, we review the main data concerning expression of galectins in human cancer. Only galectin-1 and galectin-3, the most abundant and examined galectins, will be examined here.
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PMID:Expression of galectins in cancer: a critical review. 1475 77

Galectin-3, a 31 kDa member of the beta-galactoside-binding proteins, is an intracellular and extracellular lectin which interacts with intracellular glycoproteins, cell surface molecules and extracellular matrix proteins. Galectin-3 is expressed widely in epithelial and immune cells and its expression is correlated with cancer aggressiveness and metastasis. Galectin-3 is involved in various biological phenomena including cell growth, adhesion, differentiation, angiogenesis and apoptosis. Recent research revealed that galectin-3 is associated with several steps of invasion and metastasis, like angiogenesis, cell-matrix interaction, dissemination through blood flow and extravasation. Recently, we and others have shown that galectin-3 can be a reliable diagnostic marker in certain cancers and one of the target proteins of cancer treatment. In this review, we describe the involvement of galectin-3 in each steps of metastasis and clinical significance of galectin-3.
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PMID:Galectin-3 and metastasis. 1475 78

Galectins and their ligands have been implicated in cell transformation and cancer metastasis, and found to have prognostic value. Mac-2 BP, also known as 90K, is a highly glycosylated, secreted protein extensively studied in human cancer, which binds galectin-1, galectin-3 and galectin-7. High expression levels of 90K are associated with a shorter survival, the occurrence of metastasis or a reduced response to chemotherapy in patients with different types of malignancy. The mechanisms underlying the prognostic significance of 90K and galectins in cancer are far from being understood, although they may be related to the ability of these proteins to interact and, to some extent, modulate cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion and apoptosis. The resulting scenario is even more complex, as data have been presented that all these proteins might be associated with either a positive or a negative outcome of the patients. It is hypothesised that different galectins and galectin ligands with overlapping or opposite functions, expressed in different tumors during the different steps of the metastatic cascade might play a crucial role in tumor progression.
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PMID:90K (Mac-2 BP) and galectins in tumor progression and metastasis. 1475 79

Recent data have shown the existence of specific changes in mRNAs in thyroid carcinomas. It has not been clarified, however, why these changes clearly distinguish benign tissues from carcinomas, while genomic alternation such as mutations in the RAS or P53 genes do not. Further, the widely believed hypothesis, multi-step carcinogenesis, does not explain some clinical and experimental evidence of thyroid carcinomas. Considering these facts, we propose a new idea for thyroid carcinogenesis called "germ-cell carcinogenesis", in which cancer cells are derived from the remnant of fetal thyroid germ cells(thyroblasts) instead of normal thyroid follicular cells. Utilizing such mRNAs, we have established a new method for preoperative molecular-based diagnosis of thyroid carcinomas, Aspiration Biopsy Nucleic Acid Diagnosis(ABND). ABND allows us to perform preoperative nucleic acid analyses of the tumors by extracting RNAs or DNAs from tumor cells obtained by fine needle aspiration biopsies(FNABs). Pathological diagnosis of thyroid follicular carcinoma is quite difficult, and the establishment of preoperative molecular-based diagnosis of follicular carcinoma has been long expected. We found that quantification of the trefoil factor 3(TFF3)/galectin-3 mRNA ratio in thyroid tumor cells is a useful tool for distinction between follicular adenomas and carcinomas. Because ABND can be performed without any severe invasion to the patients, in the near future, when more reliable systems of quantitative RNA analysis have been developed, ABND will probably become one of the standard tests for preoperative diagnosis of thyroid carcinoma.
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PMID:[Molecular-based diagnosis of thyroid carcinoma: germ-cell carcinogenesis and aspiration biopsy nucleic acid diagnosis(ABND)]. 1496 62

Mucins are high-molecular weight epithelial glycoproteins with a high content of clustered oligosaccharides O-glycosidically linked to tandem repeat peptides rich in threonine, serine, and proline. There are two structurally and functionally distinct classes of mucins: secreted gel-forming mucins (MUC2, MUC5AC, MUC5B, and MUC6) and transmembrane mucins (MUC1, MUC3A, MUC3B, MUC4, MUC12, MUC17), although the products of some MUC genes do not fit well into either class (MUC7, MUC8, MUC9, MUC13, MUC15, MUC16). MUC1 mucin, as detected immunologically, is increased in expression in colon cancers, which correlates with a worse prognosis. Expression of MUC2 secreted gel-forming mucin is generally decreased in colorectal adenocarcinoma, but preserved in mucinous carcinomas, a distinct subtype of colon cancer associated with microsatellite instability. Another secreted gel-forming mucin, MUC5AC, a product of normal gastric mucosa, is absent from normal colon, but frequently present in colorectal adenomas and colon cancers. The O-glycosidically linked oligosaccharides of mucins can be described in terms of core type, backbone type, and peripheral structures. Colon cancer mucins have differences in both core carbohydrates and in peripheral carbohydrate structures that are being investigated as diagnostic and prognostic markers, and also as targets for cancer vaccines. Colon cancer mucins typically have increases in three core structures: Tn antigen (GalNAcalphaThr/Ser), TF antigen (Galbeta3GalNAc) and sialyl Tn (NeuAcalpha6GalNAc). The type 3 core (GlcNAcbeta3Ga1NAc) predominant in normal colonic mucin is lacking in colon cancer mucins. There are cancer-associated alterations in the peripheral carbohydrates of colonic mucins including a decrease in O-acetyl-sialic acid and a decrease in sulfation. There are, however, cancer-associated increases in sialyl LeX and related structures on mucins and other glycoproteins that can serve as ligands for selectins, increasing the metastatic capacity of colon cancer cells. The endogenous galactoside-binding protein galectin-3, which is expressed at higher levels in colon cancers than normal colon, binds to colon cancer mucin as well as other glycoproteins. Interference of the binding of selectins and galectin-3 to mucin may show therapeutic or preventative promise for colon cancer.
Cancer Metastasis Rev
PMID:Mucins and mucin binding proteins in colorectal cancer. 1500 Jan 51


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