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 unique among the galectin family of animal lectins in its biological activities and structure. Most members of the galectin family including galectin-1 possess apoptotic activities, whereas galectin-3 possesses anti-apoptotic activity. Galectin-3 is also the only chimera type galectin and consists of a nonlectin N-terminal domain and a C-terminal carbohydrate-binding domain. Recent sedimentation equilibrium and velocity studies show that murine galectin-3 is a monomer in the absence and presence of LacNAc, a monovalent sugar. However, quantitative precipitation studies in the present report indicate that galectin-3 precipitates as a pentamer with a series of divalent pentasaccharides with terminal LacNAc residues. Furthermore, the kinetics of precipitation are fast, on the order of seconds. This indicates that although the majority of galectin-3 in solution is a monomer, a rapid equilibrium exists between the monomer and a small percentage of pentamer. The latter, in turn, precipitates with the divalent oligosaccharides, resulting in rapid conversion of monomer to pentamer by mass action equilibria. Mixed quantitative precipitation experiments and electron microscopy suggest that galectin-3 forms heterogenous, disorganized cross-linking complexes with the multivalent carbohydrates. This contrasts with galectin-1 and many plant lectins that form homogeneous, organized cross-linked complexes. The results are discussed in terms of the biological properties of galectin-3.
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PMID:Galectin-3 precipitates as a pentamer with synthetic multivalent carbohydrates and forms heterogeneous cross-linked complexes. 1467 41

Multivalent glycoclusters have the potential to become pharmaceuticals by virtue of their target specificity toward clinically relevant sugar receptors. Their application can also provide fundamental insights into the impact of two spatial factors on binding, i.e., topologies of ligand (branching mode, cluster presentation) and carbohydrate recognition domains in lectins. Persubstituted macrocycles derived from nucleophilic substitution of iodide from heptakis 6-deoxy-6-iodo-beta-cyclodextrin by the unprotected sodium thiolate of 3-(3-thioacetyl propionamido)propyl glycosides (galactose, lactose and N-acetyllactosamine) were prepared. The produced glycoclusters were first tested as competitive inhibitors in solid-phase assays. A plant toxin from mistletoe and an immunoglobulin G fraction from human serum were markedly susceptible. A nearly 400-fold increase in inhibitory potency of each galactose moiety in the heptavalent form relative to free lactose (217-fold relative to free galactose) was detected. Thus, these glycoclusters can efficiently interfere, for example, with xenoantigen-dependent hyperacute rejection. Among the tested galectins selected from this family of adhesion- and growth-regulatory endogenous lectins, the substituted beta-cyclodextrins acted as sensors to delineate topological differences between the two dimeric prototype proteins. The relatively strong reactivity with chimera-type galectin-3, a mediator of tumor metastasis, disclosed selectivity for glycocluster binding among galectins. Equally important, the geometry of ligand display (maxiclusters, bi- or triantennary N-glycans) made its mark on the inhibitory potency. To further determine the sensitivity of a distinct galectin presented on the cell surface and not in solution, we established a stably transfected tumor cell clone. We detected a significant response to presence of the multivalent inhibitor. This type of chemical scaffold with favorable pharmacologic properties might thus be exploited for the design of galectin- and ligand-type-selective glycoclusters.
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PMID:Persubstituted cyclodextrin-based glycoclusters as inhibitors of protein-carbohydrate recognition using purified plant and mammalian lectins and wild-type and lectin-gene-transfected tumor cells as targets. 1473 87

The carbohydrate binding specificities of the galectin family of animal lectins has been the source of intense recent investigations. Isothermal titration microcalorimetry (ITC) provides direct determination of the thermodynamics of binding of carbohydrates to lectins, and has provided important insights into the fine carbohydrate binding specificities of a wide number of plant and animal lectins. Recent ITC studies have been performed with galectin-1, galectin-3 and galectin-7 and their interactions with sialylated and non-sialylated carbohydrates. The results show important differences in the specificities of these three galectins toward poly-N-acetyllactosamine epitopes found on the surface of cells.
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PMID:Thermodynamic binding studies of galectin-1, -3 and -7. 1475 69

Nuclear extracts (NE), capable of carrying out splicing of pre-mRNA, contain galectin-1 and galectin-3. NE depleted of galectins-1 and -3 concomitantly lose their splicing activity. The activity of the galectin-depleted extract can be reconstituted by the addition of either galectin-1 or galectin-3. These results suggest that galectins-1 and -3 serve as redundant splicing factors. Consistent with this notion, immunofluorescence staining showed that both galectins yielded a diffuse nucleoplasmic distribution, matching that of nascent transcripts and consistent with the hypothesis that bulk transcription and pre-mRNA processing occur throughout the nucleoplasm. Under some conditions, the galectins could be found in speckled structures and nuclear bodies but the prevailing thought is that these represent sites of storage and recycling rather than sites of action. Galectin-1 and galectin-3 bind directly to Gemin4, a component of the SMN core complex, which plays multiple roles in ribonucleoprotein assembly, including the biogenesis, delivery, and recycling of snRNPs to the spliceosome. Thus, galectin-1 and galectin-3 constitute a part of an interacting dynamic network of many factors involved in the splicing and transport of mRNA.
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PMID:Understanding the biochemical activities of galectin-1 and galectin-3 in the nucleus. 1475 73

Members of the galectin family are presently known to participate in cellular homeostasis by modulating cell growth, controlling cell cycle progression, and inducing or inhibiting apoptosis. Both intracellular and extracellular activities of galectins have been described, with the former typically independent of lectin activity, and the latter mediated by lectin activity. Galectin-1 and -3 are recognized as activators and inducers of cell stasis in extracellular capacities. Galectin-1, -7, -8, -9 and -12 are characterized as promoters or inducers of apoptosis, while galectin-3 is demonstrated as an inhibitor of apoptosis intracellularly. Localization studies of galectins have established that these proteins can segregate into multiple intracellular compartments, and the preference for segregation is dependent on the status of the cell. Localization would, therefore, likely correspond to compartmental function. While galectin-1 and -3 have been the most abundantly expressed and extensively studied, and therefore, the members best understood, expanding interest in galectins has resulted in description of new members that display more restricted expression patterns, suggesting more specific activity. Nevertheless, as demonstrated for many members, it appears that a major feature of the galectin family is the homeostatic regulation of cells.
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PMID:Regulation of cellular homeostasis by galectins. 1475 74

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

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

The impact of a pathogen-induced inflammatory response on dendritic cells (DCs) and on their expression of galectin-3 (Gal-3) was studied on splenic DCs (sDCs) from Trypanosoma cruzi-infected mice. We determined the lectin expression and also presentation of ligands using the labeled galectin as probe. By reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, western blot analysis, quantitative glycocytochemistry, and computer-assisted quantitative microscopy, we demonstrate that, in sDCs from infected mice, expression of Gal-3 and Gal-3-specific ligands were markedly up-regulated and adhesiveness was increased with Gal-3-coated substratum. Gal-3 expression was also enhanced in T. cruzi-infected D2SC-1 cells. To assess influence on migration, we had to work exclusively with D2SC-1 cells because sDCs rapidly lost their capacity to adhere to substratum. Migration of infected- and TCM-treated D2SC-1 cells were reduced when substratum was coated with Gal-3. Expression of Gal-3 by D2SC-1 was reduced when they were incubated with anti-Gal-3 antisense oligonucleotide without effect on cell invasion by the parasite. By using seven neoglycoconjugates, we probed the cellular capacity to specifically bind carbohydrate ligands. Similar to Gal-3, an up-regulation was noted with respect to sites specific for Man and alpha-GalNAc, respectively, revealing that infection-dependent changes are not confined to Gal-3-dependent parameters. Considered together, these data document for the first time that a parasitic infection can modulate both in vivo and in vitro the expression of Gal-3 and of ligands for this lectin in DCs with functional consequences on their capacities of adhesion and migration. These results suggest a new immunomodulatory property of T. cruzi.
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PMID:Up-regulation of galectin-3 and its ligands by Trypanosoma cruzi infection with modulation of adhesion and migration of murine dendritic cells. 1504 84

Galectins are a growing family of animal lectins with common consensus sequences that bind beta-Gal and LacNAc residues. There are at present 14 members of the galectin family; however, certain galectins possess different structures as well as biological properties. Galectin-1 is a dimer of two homologous carbohydrate recognition domains (CRDs) and possesses apoptotic and proinvasive activities. Galectin-3 consists of a C-terminal CRD and an N-terminal nonlectin domain implicated in the oligomerization of the protein and is often associated with antiapoptotic activity. Because many cellular oligosaccharide receptors are multivalent, it is important to characterize the interactions of multivalent carbohydrates with galectins-1 and -3. In the present study, binding of bovine heart galectin-1 and recombinant murine galectin-3 to a series of synthetic analogs containing two LacNAc residues separated by a varying number of methylene groups, as well as biantennary analogs possessing two LacNAc residues, were examined using isothermal titration microcalorimetry (ITC) and hemagglutination inhibition measurements. The thermodynamics of binding of the multivalent carbohydrates to the C-terminal CRD domain of galectin-3 was also investigated. ITC results showed that each bivalent analog bound by both LacNAc residues to the two galectins. However, galectin-1 shows a lack of enhanced affinity for the bivalent straight chain and branched chain analogs, whereas galectin-3 shows enhanced affinity for only lacto-N-hexaose, a naturally occurring branched chain carbohydrate. The CRD domain of galectin-3 was shown to possess similar thermodynamic binding properties as the intact molecule. The results of this study have important implications for the design of carbohydrate inhibitors of the two galectins.
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PMID:Thermodynamic binding studies of bivalent oligosaccharides to galectin-1, galectin-3, and the carbohydrate recognition domain of galectin-3. 1514 96

Primary olfactory neurons project axons from the olfactory neuroepithelium lining the nasal cavity to the olfactory bulb in the brain. These axons grow within large mixed bundles in the olfactory nerve and then sort out into homotypic fascicles in the nerve fiber layer of the olfactory bulb before terminating in topographically fixed glomeruli. Carbohydrates expressed on the cell surface have been implicated in axon sorting within the nerve fiber layer. We have identified two novel subpopulations of primary olfactory neurons that express distinct alpha-extended lactoseries carbohydrates recognised by monoclonal antibodies LA4 and KH10. Both carbohydrate epitopes are present on novel glycoforms of the neural cell adhesion molecule, which we have named NOC-7 and NOC-8. Primary axon fasciculation is disrupted in vitro when interactions between these cell surface lactoseries carbohydrates and their endogenous binding molecules are inhibited by the LA4 and KH10 antibodies or lactosamine sugars. We report the expression of multiple members of the lactoseries binding galectin family in the primary olfactory system. In particular, galectin-3 is expressed by ensheathing cells surrounding nerve fascicles in the submucosa and nerve fiber layer, where it may mediate cross-linking of axons. Galectin-4, -7, and -8 are expressed by the primary olfactory axons as they grow from the nasal cavity to the olfactory bulb. A putative role for NOC-7 and NOC-8 in axon fasciculation and the expression of multiple galectins in the developing olfactory nerve suggest that these molecules may be involved in the formation of this pathway, particularly in the sorting of axons as they converge towards their target.
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PMID:Expression and putative role of lactoseries carbohydrates present on NCAM in the rat primary olfactory pathway. 1522 46


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