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Molecular galactose-galectin association in neuroblastoma cells: An unconventional tool for qualitative/quantitative screening.

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TLDR
The hypothesis behind this investigation has been that the molecular mechanisms by which glycans modulate neural metastatic cells involve a protein–carbohydrate association, galectin–galactose, which is studied in neuroblastoma cells.
Abstract
Purpose Galectin decorates the cell membrane and forms an extracellular molecular association with galactoside units. Here, galactoside probes have been used to study galectin expression in neuroblastoma cells. The hypothesis behind this investigation has been that the molecular mechanisms by which glycans modulate neural metastatic cells involve a protein-carbohydrate association, galectin-galactose. Experimental design Preliminary screening to validate the hypothesis has been performed with galactose moieties anchored to beads. The molecular association has been studied by FACS. In vitro experiments reveal the molecular binding preferences of the metastatic neuroblastoma cells. Ex vivo, the galactose probes discriminate healthy tissues. The unconventional assay in microfluidics used in this study displayed results analogous to the above (GI-LI-N cell capture efficiency overcomes IMR-32). Results At the point of equilibrium of shear and binding forces, the capture yield inside the chamber was measured to 60 ± 4.4% in GI-LI-N versus 40 ± 2.1% in IMR-32. Staining of the fished cells and subsequent conjugation with red beads bearing the galactose also have evidenced that microfluidics can be used to study and quantify the molecular association of galectin-galactose. Most importantly, a crucial insight for obtaining single-cell qualitative/quantitative glycome analysis has been achieved. Finally, the specificity of the assay performed in microfluidics is demonstrated by comparing GI-LI-N fishing efficiency in galactose and fucose environments. The residual adhesion to fucose confirmed the existence of receptors for this glycan and that its eventual unspecific binding (i.e. due to electrostatic interactions) is insignificant compared with the molecular binding. Conclusion Identification and understanding of this mechanism of discrimination can be relevant for diagnostic monitoring and for producing probes tailored to interfere with galectin activities associated with the malignant phenotype. Besides, the given strategy has implications for the rational design of galectin-specific ligands.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Microliter chip for sensitive detection of the binding activity of glycans and cognate molecules

TL;DR: It is proved that non-specific lectins cannot form specific bindings in microdroplets using microscopic fluorescence measurements and a binding assay for detecting galactose–complexes results in a dissociation constant KD = 0.07 mM.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface plasmon resonance study for a reliable determination of the affinity constant of multivalent grafted beads.

TL;DR: In this article, Galactose-grafted beads were prepared using the main design principle of the cluster effect and the results of steady-state and kinetics analysis evidenced a higher affinity of the galactose grafted beads over the beadless galactoses solution.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances in neuroblastoma.

TL;DR: The author discusses recent advances in the understanding of neuroblastoma, an embryonal cancer of the autonomic nervous system, which has one of the highest rates of spontaneous and complete regression.
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Turning 'sweet' on immunity: galectin-glycan interactions in immune tolerance and inflammation.

TL;DR: An improved understanding of the mechanisms underlying galectins' functions will provide further opportunities for developing new therapies based on the immunoregulatory properties of this multifaceted protein family.
Journal ArticleDOI

A systematic approach to protein glycosylation analysis: a path through the maze

TL;DR: Some of the major technologies routinely used for structural N- and O-glycan analysis are introduced, describing the complementary information that each provides.
Journal Article

Definition of a Continuous Human Cell Line Derived from Neuroblastoma

TL;DR: A continuous hyperdiploid human cell line, IMR-32, was derived from neuroblastoma tissue and proved a relatively poor host for virus replication, particularly for representative viruses of two of the human enterovirus groups.
Journal ArticleDOI

Galectins as modulators of cell adhesion.

TL;DR: Recent progress is discussed in defining the specificities and mechanisms of action of secreted galectins as multifunctional cell regulators as well as regulating cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion.
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