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, is a multifunctional effector. It is the only chimera-type member of the galectin family of endogenous lectins, which share specificity with beta-galactosides and have a jelly-roll-like folding pattern. It's activity profile includes modulation of cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions and the regulation of proliferation and apoptosis/anoikis. While lectin histochemistry with plant/invertebrate proteins is routine practice and immunohistochemical analysis of endogenous lectins has been thoroughly examined, the application of an endogenous lectin as a marker is presently primarily a promising concept. The aims of our study were to test galectin-3 as a technical probe and to correlate staining by the tissue lectin, localising accessible ligands in situ, to clinicopathological characteristics and the prognosis of patients (relapse-free and overall survival) in advanced head and neck squamous cell cancer. We measured galectin-3-dependent staining in 53 surgically resected oropharyngeal and laryngeal cancer specimens (stage III or IV). Patients were divided into two groups based on a threshold of 5% positivity in the tumour cell population. The patient's degree of positivity was significantly correlated with their level of differentiation and keratinisation and lack of lymph node involvement (P=0.0001, P=0.0007 and P=0.0224, respectively). Periods of relapse-free and overall survival were significantly shortened when the tumour population failed to meet the positivity criterion, i.e. to harbour ligands for the endogenous lectin (P=0.0039 and P=0.0259, respectively). We conclude that (a) studies with an endogenous lectin as a marker are technically feasible and (b) detection of accessible galectin-3-specific ligands is an independent prognostic marker in advanced head and neck squamous cell cancer with therapeutic potential. Of note, histochemical application of an endogenous effector after its purification and labelling may bear relevance beyond the galectins.
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PMID:Galectin-3 - an emerging prognostic indicator in advanced head and neck carcinoma. 1545 59

The larynx is the most common site of malignancy in the upper aerodigestive tract. In Brazil, malignant laryngeal lesions represent 2% of all cancers, with approximately 3000 annual deaths. The association between human papillomavirus (HPV) and laryngeal cancer is still controversial. The aim of the present retrospective study was to determine the expression of galectin-3 immunoperoxidase in laryngeal carcinoma by examining paraffin-embedded larynx biopsies from 65 patients, 10 in situ laryngeal carcinomas, 27 laryngeal carcinomas without metastases, and 28 with metastases. Twenty-eight cervical lymph nodes from patients with metastatic lesions were also evaluated. Nested PCR was performed to detect and type HPV DNA. Galectin-3 expression was assessed by immunohistochemistry using a computer-assisted system. Among 65 patients, 55 (84.6%) were positive to beta-globin (internal control); 10 (15.4%) patients were beta-globin negative and were excluded from the HPV evaluation. Thus, 7 (12.7%) out of 55 patients were HPV positive and 48 (87.3%) out of 55 patients were HPV negative. High expression of galectin-3 was observed in invasive laryngeal tumors, suggesting that galectin-3 could be associated with the invasiveness and aggressiveness of laryngeal carcinomas.
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PMID:Galectin-3 overexpression in invasive laryngeal carcinoma, assessed by computer-assisted analysis. 1933 33