4.8 Article

Physical tuning of galectin-3 signaling

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2024117118

Keywords

signal transduction; galectin-3; emergent function; multivalency; coiled-coil

Funding

  1. NIH (National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering) [5R03EB01968402]
  2. NIH (National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research) [1-R01-DE027301-01]
  3. NIH/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences Clinical and Translational Science Awards [UL1TR001427, TL1TR001428]
  4. JDRF [2SRA2019781SB]
  5. NIH (National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases) [1F31DK12639701A1, 1-R01-DK124267-01A1]

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Galectin-3 exhibits dynamic oligomerization and promiscuous binding, affecting cell behavior by influencing signaling pathways. Synthetic Gal3 constructs with defined valency can physically regulate extracellular signaling activity and cell death induction. Changes in multivalency impact caspase activation, membrane glycoprotein engagement, and intracellular pathway activation.
Galectin-3 (Gal3) exhibits dynamic oligomerization and promiscuous binding, which can lead to concomitant activation of synergistic, antagonistic, or noncooperative signaling pathways that alter cell behavior. Conferring signaling pathway selectivity through mutations in the Gal3-glycan binding interface is challenged by the abundance of common carbohydrate types found on many membrane glycoproteins. Here, employing alpha-helical coiled-coils as scaffolds to create synthetic Gal3 constructs with defined valency, we demonstrate that oligomerization can physically regulate extracellular signaling activity of Gal3. Constructs with 2 to 6 Gal3 subunits (Dimer, Trimer, Tetramer, Pentamer, Hexamer) demonstrated glycan-binding properties and cell death-inducing potency that scaled with valency. Dimer was the minimum functional valency. Unlike wild-type Gal3, which signals apoptosis and mediates agglutination, synthetic Gal3 constructs induced cell death without agglutination. In the presence of CD45, Hexamer was distributed on the cell membrane, whereas it clustered in absence of CD45 via membrane glycans other than those found on CD7. Wild-type Gal3, Pentamer, and Hexamer required CD45 and CD7 to signal apoptosis, and the involvement of caspases in apoptogenic signaling was increased in absence of CD45. However, wild-type Gal3 depended on caspases to signal apoptosis to a greater extent than Hexamer, which had greater caspase dependence than Pentamer. Diminished caspase activation downstream of Hexamer signaling led to decreased pannexin-1 hemichannel opening and interleukin-2 secretion, events facilitated by the increased caspase activation downstream of wild-type Gal3 signaling. Thus, synthetic fixation of Gal3 multivalency can impart physical control of its outside-in signaling activity by governing membrane glycoprotein engagement and, in turn, intracellular pathway activation.

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