| Literature DB >> 31873723 |
María Romina Girotti1, Mariana Salatino2, Tomás Dalotto-Moreno2, Gabriel A Rabinovich2,3.
Abstract
Hanahan and Weinberg have proposed 10 organizing principles that enable growth and metastatic dissemination of cancer cells. These distinctive and complementary capabilities, defined as the "hallmarks of cancer," include the ability of tumor cells and their microenvironment to sustain proliferative signaling, evade growth suppressors, resist cell death, promote replicative immortality, induce angiogenesis, support invasion and metastasis, reprogram energy metabolism, induce genomic instability and inflammation, and trigger evasion of immune responses. These common features are hierarchically regulated through different mechanisms, including those involving glycosylation-dependent programs that influence the biological and clinical impact of each hallmark. Galectins, an evolutionarily conserved family of glycan-binding proteins, have broad influence in tumor progression by rewiring intracellular and extracellular circuits either in cancer or stromal cells, including immune cells, endothelial cells, and fibroblasts. In this review, we dissect the role of galectins in shaping cellular circuitries governing each hallmark of tumors, illustrating relevant examples and highlighting novel opportunities for treating human cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31873723 PMCID: PMC7041721 DOI: 10.1084/jem.20182041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Med ISSN: 0022-1007 Impact factor: 14.307
Figure 1.Role of individual galectins in the hallmarks of cancer. This adapted figure from Hanahan and Weinberg’s iconic review “The hallmarks of cancer: The next generation” (Hanahan and Weinberg, 2011) depicts the impact of different galectin family members on different cancer hallmarks. Galectins can either promote (green) or impair (red) different cellular and molecular processes leading to tumor growth and progression. Most work has focused on the role of galectins on selected cancer hallmarks such as avoiding immune responses, promoting angiogenesis, and sustaining proliferative signaling, while their influence on other hallmarks has only been partially explored. Fig. 1 is adapted with permission from Cell.
Figure 2.Galectin-driven regulatory circuits in the TME. Galectins influence the function of distinct cell types, including immune cells, ECs, and CAFs in the TME. Within the immune compartment, Gal1, Gal3, and Gal9 fuel immune-evasive mechanisms through the control of myeloid and lymphoid programs. Gal1 tilts the balance of the immune response toward a Th2 profile by selectively deleting Th1, Th17, and CTLs. Moreover, Gal1 drives the differentiation of T reg cells, endows DCs with tolerogenic potential, polarizes macrophages toward an anti-inflammatory M2 profile, and inhibits NK cell function. Interestingly, Gal1–N-glycan interactions may couple tumor hypoxia to vascularization and preserve angiogenesis in tumors refractory to anti-VEGF treatment. On the other hand, Gal3 acts by limiting TCR-dependent signaling and promoting T cell anergy and exhaustion by distancing the TCR from CD8 molecules and engaging LAG-3 on the surface of CD8 T cells. Gal3 also impairs the antitumor activity of NK cells by inhibiting NKp30-mediated cytotoxicity and interrupting NKG2D–MHC class I–related chain A interactions. Moreover, Gal3 influences VEGF and basic fibroblast growth factor–induced angiogenesis through binding to N-glycan motifs on αvβ3 integrin. Moreover, Gal9 confers immune privilege to tumor cells through TIM-3–dependent or independent mechanisms. While it selectively kills terminally differentiated TIM-3+ Th1 cells, it also binds to Dectin-1 on macrophages and CD44 on T reg cells, favoring a tolerogenic microenvironment. On the other hand, Gal8 controls EC biology via association with ALCAM-1 (CD166), whereas different Gal9 isoforms selectively control angiogenesis. Within the tumor stroma, Gal1 is highly expressed in CAFs, particularly in human stellate pancreatic cells and controls fibroblast secretion of a variety of cytokines, chemokines, and growth factors. Gal1 (a prototype family member) is indicated as a noncovalent homodimer each containing one CRD, Gal3 (a chimera-type galectin) is illustrated based on its pentameric structure, and Gal9 (a tandem-repeat galectin) is depicted as two CRDs connected in tandem. MDSC, myeloid-derived suppressor cell.