| Literature DB >> 32899694 |
Akira Hara1, Masayuki Niwa2, Tomohiro Kanayama1, Kei Noguchi1, Ayumi Niwa1, Mikiko Matsuo1, Takahiro Kuroda1, Yuichiro Hatano1, Hideshi Okada3, Hiroyuki Tomita1.
Abstract
The use of molecular biomarkers for the early detection of heart disease, before their onset of symptoms, is an attractive novel approach. Ideal molecular biomarkers, those that are both sensitive and specific to heart disease, are likely to provide a much earlier diagnosis, thereby providing better treatment outcomes. Galectin-3 is expressed by various immune cells, including mast cells, histiocytes and macrophages, and plays an important role in diverse physiological functions. Since galectin-3 is readily expressed on the cell surface, and is readily secreted by injured and inflammatory cells, it has been suggested that cardiac galectin-3 could be a marker for cardiac disorders such as cardiac inflammation and fibrosis, depending on the specific pathogenesis. Thus, galectin-3 may be a novel candidate biomarker for the diagnosis, analysis and prognosis of various cardiac diseases, including heart failure. The goals of heart disease treatment are to prevent acute onset and to predict their occurrence by using the ideal molecular biomarkers. In this review, we discuss and summarize recent developments of galectin-3 as a next-generation molecular biomarker of heart disease. Furthermore, we describe how galectin-3 may be useful as a diagnostic marker for detecting the early stages of various heart diseases, which may contribute to improved early therapeutic interventions.Entities:
Keywords: animal model; biomarker; diagnostic; early stage; galectin-3; heart disease; prognostic
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32899694 PMCID: PMC7565392 DOI: 10.3390/biom10091277
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the galectin family members. Galectin members are divided into three types based on the organization of the galectin carbohydrate recognition domain (CRD).
The potential use of Gal-3 as a diagnostic biomarker and prognostic indicator in various heart diseases.
| Heart Disease | Usage of Biomarker | Potential Use as Biomarkers | Refs. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| acute heart failure | plasma level | • combination with natriuretic peptide | [ |
| acute heart failure | plasma level | • promising prognostic marker | [ | |
| chronic heart failure | plasma level | • useful in heart failure | [ | |
| chronic heart failure | myocardial and plasma level | • no association with histology | [ | |
| acute myocardial infarction | serum level | • no definite relationship with ventricular remodeling | [ | |
| chronic heart failure | myocardial and plasma level | • marker for both cardiac inflammation and fibrosis | [ | |
|
| chronic heart failure | plasma level | • association of Gal-3 with increased risk for incident heart failure and mortality | [ |
| cardiovascular disease | plasma level | • association of Gal-3 with age and risk factors of cardiovascular disease | [ | |
| chronic heart failure | plasma level | • not suggested to be a predictor of mortality | [ | |
| chronic heart failure | plasma level | • association of Gal-3 with severe heart failure | [ | |
| heart failure undergoing heart transplantation | plasma levelmyocardial Gal-3 expression | • insufficient use of Gal-3 as a marker of heart | [ | |
| heart failure of hypertensive origin | biopsies and plasma samples | • cardiac and systemic excess Gal-3 in heart failure patients | [ | |
| cardiovascular mortality and heart failure | plasma level | • large-scale meta-analysis | [ | |
| atrial fibrillation | circulating Gal-3 level | • significantly higher in patients with recurrence of atrial fibrillation | [ | |
| adult congenital heart disease | serum level | • association of Gal-3 with adverse cardiovascular events | [ | |
| pediatric congenital heart disease | serum level | • association of Gal-3 with increased risk of readmission or mortality after the operation | [ |
Figure 2The cardiac lesions of dilated cardiomyopathy in the late stage of δ-sarcoglycan (δ-SG) knockout (KO) mice. Microphotographs for hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining, Azan staining and immunohistochemistry of Gal-3 are shown. Scale bars in H&E = 1 mm in the upper panel and 100 μm in the lower panel. Gal-3 expression sites indicated by arrows are identical to the fibrotic areas detected as blue in azan staining.
Promising animal models reproducing the clinical features of Gal-3 in heart failure and cardiovascular disease. IR: ischemia/reperfusion.
| Animal Species | Experimental Models | Experimental Methods | Experimental Findings | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| rat | chronic heart failure | intrapericardial injection of recombinant Gal-3 | • myocardial fibrosis and its pharmacological inhibition | [ |
| rat | chronic heart failure | intrapericardial infusion of low-dose Gal-3 | • increased Gal-3 in hypertrophied hearts | [ |
| rat | chronic heart failure | banding of the pulmonary artery | • increase of Gal-3 in ventricles | [ |
| rat | ischemia/reperfusion injury | Gal-3 pharmacological inhibition | • Gal-3 blockade improved ischemic injury | [ |
| mouse | acute heart failure | viral myocarditis | • time-course analysis of cardiac and serum Gal-3 | [ |
| mouse | myocardial fibrosis | angiotensin-mediated hypertension in AngII/Cx3cr1-/- mice | • macrophages promoting fibroblast differentiation and collagen production | [ |
| mouse | acute myocarditis and chronic fibrosis | coxsackievirus B3-induced myocarditis | • disruption of Gal-3 gene reduced acute myocarditis and chronic fibrosis | [ |
| mouse | heart failure | isoproterenol-induced left ventricular dysfunction and fibrosis | • interaction of Gal-3 with aldosterone in promoting macrophage infiltration and cardiac fibrosis | [ |
| mouse | pressure-overloaded heart | transverse aortic constriction | • early upregulation of Gal-3 in macrophages | [ |
| mouse | acute myocardial infarction | intravenous transplantation of human umbilical cord blood mesenchymal stem cells | • close association of Gal-3 with the ratio of M1 macrophages to M2 macrophages | [ |
| mouse | ischemia/reperfusion injury | 30 min/24 h in ischemia/ reperfusion model | • contribution of upregulated Gal-3 in cardiac dysfunction | [ |
| mouse | ischemia/reperfusion injury | wild-type mice and Gal-3 knockout mice | • protective role of Gal-3 on the myocardium following IR injury | [ |
| mouse | several mouse models of heart disease | cardiac and plasma Gal-3-level analysis | • multifold increases in cardiac Gal-3 expression | [ |
| mouse | fibrotic cardiomyopathy | cardiac overexpression of b2-adrenoceptors | • upregulation of cardiac Gal-3 expression | [ |