| Literature DB >> 24205440 |
Diego J Laderach1, Lucas Gentilini, Felipe M Jaworski, Daniel Compagno.
Abstract
A better understanding of multimolecular interactions involved in tumor dissemination is required to identify new effective therapies for advanced prostate cancer (PCa). Several groups investigated protein-glycan interactions as critical factors for crosstalk between prostate tumors and their microenvironment. This review both discusses whether the "galectin-signature" might serve as a reliable biomarker for the identification of patients with high risk of metastasis and assesses the galectin-glycan lattices as potential novel targets for anticancer therapies. The ultimate goal of this review is to convey how basic findings related to galectins could be in turn translated into clinical settings for patients with advanced PCa.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24205440 PMCID: PMC3800608 DOI: 10.1155/2013/519436
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prostate Cancer ISSN: 2090-312X
Summary of reported galectin functions in prostate cancers.
| Galectin | Tumor cell growth/survival/apoptosis | Metastasis | Immune response | |||
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| Gal-1 | Promotes apoptosis in LNCaP [ | Gal-1 principal inducer of neovascularization [ | Promotes cell adhesion to ECM, EC [ | ? | Invasion of T cell in matrigel assays and adhesion of T cell to Gal-1-expressing EC [ | ? |
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| Gal-3 | Promotes apoptosis or survival depending of cell subcellular localization or cell type [ | Gal-3 as inducer of angiogenesis [ | Interaction with blood vessel allowing metastasis process such as arrest in certain organs [ | Anti-Gal-3 Abs or MCP inhibits spontaneous metastasis in Copenhagen rat-injected Dunning rat PCa cells [ | ? | ? |
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| Gal-8 | Exclusive expression at the neoplasic stage in prostate tissue (PCTA-1); links to integrin to inhibit cell adhesion [ | ? | Links to integrin to inhibit cell adhesion and promote metastasis and cell spreading. In contrary, in soluble form Gal-8 promotes cell-adhesion to ECM [ | ? | ? | ? |
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| Gal-4 | Gal-4 as inducer of tubulogenesis [ | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
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| Gal-9 | Gal-9 as inducer of tubulogenesis [ | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
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| Gal-12 | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
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| Others Gals | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
Figure 1Interactions of galectins with extracellular glycoconjugates.
Figure 2Glycans biogenesis and galectins recognition. (a) N-Glycans and (b) O-Glycans.
Figure 3Galectin-1 expression in LNCaP cells. (a) Protein levels of Gal-1 in castration sensitive LNCaP and castration resistant 22Rv1 and PC-3 PCa cell lines. (b) Transcriptional levels of Gal-1 in castration sensitive (CS) or resistant (CR) LNCaP cells. Induction of prostate specific antigen (PSA) in response to androgen receptor agonist (R18.81; 3 days, 10−10 M) is shown in both cases as fold change between cultures in absence of hormones and in presence of R18.81. Cells were cultured in absence of hormones (medium complemented with 10% stripped charcoal-treated serum) for 48 h and then cultured for 3 days in absence or presence of R18.81 (10−10 M) before mRNA extraction and RT-qPCR for Gal-1 and PSA expression analyses.
Figure 4Profile of expression of galectins through PCa evolution. Radical prostatectomies were classified according to TNM scale. Specimens (n = 61) covered all stages of prostate cancer evolution, including T1 (tumor detected in less or 5% of the tissue), T2 (tumor confined to the prostate), T3 (tumor that extends beyond the prostatic capsule), and T4 (tumor that invades structures other than seminal vesicles), in addition to BHP. Immunohistochemistry was conducted on paraffin-embedded tissue samples as previously described [23]. The figure shows proportional expression of each Gal at different stages of PCa.