Galectin-3 marks activated macrophages in failure-prone hypertrophied hearts and contributes to cardiac dysfunction.
Umesh C. Sharma,Saraswati Pokharel,Thomas J. van Brakel,Jop H. van Berlo,Jack P.M. Cleutjens,Blanche Schroen,Sabine André,Harry J.G.M. Crijns,Hans J. Gabius,Jos G. Maessen,Yigal M. Pinto +10 more
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TL;DR: Galectin-3, a macrophage-derived mediator, induces cardiac fibroblast proliferation, collagen deposition, and ventricular dysfunction, which implies that HF therapy aimed at inflammatory responses may need to be targeted at the early stages of HF and probably needs to antagonize multiple inflammatory mediators, including galectIn-3.
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Abstract: Background— Inflammatory mechanisms have been proposed to be important in heart failure (HF), and cytokines have been implicated to add to the progression of HF. However, it is unclear whether such mechanisms are already activated when hypertrophied hearts still appear well-compensated and whether such early mechanisms contribute to the development of HF. Methods and Results— In a comprehensive microarray study, galectin-3 emerged as the most robustly overexpressed gene in failing versus functionally compensated hearts from homozygous transgenic TGRmRen2-27 (Ren-2) rats. Myocardial biopsies obtained at an early stage of hypertrophy before apparent HF showed that expression of galectin-3 was increased specifically in the rats that later rapidly developed HF. Galectin-3 colocalized with activated myocardial macrophages. We found galectin-3-binding sites in rat cardiac fibroblasts and the extracellular matrix. Recombinant galectin-3 induced cardiac fibroblast proliferation, collagen production, and cyclin D1...
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D. Dziadosz,L. Daniłowicz-Szymanowicz,P. Wejner-Mik,M. Budnik,B. Brzezińska,P. Duchnowski,K. Golińska-Grzybała,K. Jaworski,I. Jedliński,M. Kamela,J. Kasprzak,M. Kowalczyk-Domagała,K. Kurnicka,D. Kustrzycka-Kratochwil,K. Mickiewicz,O. Możeńska,Z. Oko-Sarnowska,M. Plewka,Anna Polewczyk,Beata Uziębło-Życzkowska,Karina Wierzbowska-Drabik,R. Wachnicka‐Truty,E. Wołoszyn-Horák,P. Szymanski,A. Gackowski,K. Mizia-Stec +25 more
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The emerging role of galectins in cardiovascular disease.
Nina W. van der Hoeven,Maurits R. Hollander,Cansu Yıldırım,Matthijs F. Jansen,Paul F. Teunissen,Anton J.G. Horrevoets,Tineke C. T. M. van der Pouw Kraan,Niels van Royen +7 more
TL;DR: This review summarizes the association between galectin and the development of multiple cardiovascular diseases such as myocarditis, ischemic stroke, myocardial infarction, heart failure and atrial fibrillation and focuses on the linkages between angiogenesis, arteriogenesis and atherosclerosis.
Clinical Phenotyping of Heart Failure with Biomarkers: Current and Future Perspectives.
TL;DR: Integrating variables—including clinical variables, HF biomarkers, imaging, genotypes, metabolomics, and proteomics—can identify different pathophysiologies, lead to more precise phenotypic classification, and warrant investigation in future clinical trials.
Role for Galectin-3 in Calcific Aortic Valve Stenosis.
J. Rafael Sadaba,Ernesto Martínez-Martínez,Vanessa Arrieta,Virginia Alvarez,Amaya Fernández-Celis,Jaime Ibarrola,Amaia Melero,Patrick Rossignol,Victoria Cachofeiro,Natalia López-Andrés +9 more
TL;DR: Gal‐3, which is overexpressed in AVs from AS patients, appears to play a central role in calcification in AS.
The association between galectin-3 and occurrence of reinfarction early after first myocardial infarction treated invasively
Iwona Szadkowska,Rafał Nikodem Wlazeł,Marta Migała,Karolina Bajon-Laskowska,Krzysztof Szadkowski,Marzenna Zielińska,Marek Paradowski,Lucjan Pawlicki +7 more
TL;DR: Galectin-3 might be an additional useful biomarker in prediction for reinfarction early after first MI, as a biomarker of inflammation and fibrosis, in patients with first MI treated invasively.
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Existence of two populations of cyclin/proliferating cell nuclear antigen during the cell cycle: association with DNA replication sites.
R Bravo,H Macdonald-Bravo +1 more
TL;DR: It was shown that the staining patterns of the replicon clusters and their order of appearance throughout the S phase are identical to those observed for cyclin, demonstrating that cyclin is tightly associated to the sites of DNA replication and that it must have a fundamental role in DNA synthesis in eukaryotic cells.
Intracellular functions of galectins
TL;DR: This review summarizes the intracellular activities displayed by several galectins and discusses the possible underlying mechanisms.
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Extracellular functions of galectin-3
TL;DR: Galectin-3 has been suspected of modulating cell to extracellular matrix interactions in a novel fashion ever since it was first described but the rapid accumulation of research data in just the last 8 years alone has completely changed the perspective of this multifunctional protein.
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