| Literature DB >> 13679866 |
Jürgen Kopitz1, Sabine André, Carolina von Reitzenstein, Kees Versluis, Herbert Kaltner, Roland J Pieters, Kojiro Wasano, Ichiro Kuwabara, Fu-Tong Liu, Michael Cantz, Albert J R Heck, Hans-Joachim Gabius.
Abstract
The extracellular functions of galectin-7 (p53-induced gene 1) are largely unknown. On the surface of neuroblastoma cells (SK-N-MC), the increased GM1 density, a result of upregulated ganglioside sialidase activity, is a key factor for the switch from proliferation to differentiation. We show by solid-phase and cell assays that the sugar chain of this ganglioside is a ligand for galectin-7. In serum-supplemented proliferation assays, galectin-7 reduced neuroblastoma cell growth without the appearance of features characteristic for classical apoptosis. The presence of galectin-3 blocked this effect, which mechanistically resembles that of galectin-1. By virtue of carbohydrate binding, galectin-7 thus exerts neuroblastoma growth control similar to galectin-1 despite their structural differences. In addition to p53-linked proapoptotic activity intracellularly, galectin-7, acting as a lectin on the cell surface, appears to be capable of reducing cancer cell proliferation in susceptible systems.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 13679866 DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1206631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 9.867