Cells (Nov 2021)

Therapeutic Benefit of Galectin-1: Beyond Membrane Repair, a Multifaceted Approach to LGMD2B

  • Mary L. Vallecillo-Zúniga,
  • Peter Daniel Poulson,
  • Jacob S. Luddington,
  • Christian J. Arnold,
  • Matthew Rathgeber,
  • Braden C. Kartchner,
  • Spencer Hayes,
  • Hailie Gill,
  • Jonard C. Valdoz,
  • Jonathan L. Spallino,
  • Seth Garfield,
  • Ethan L. Dodson,
  • Connie M. Arthur,
  • Sean R. Stowell,
  • Pam M. Van Ry

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells10113210
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
p. 3210

Abstract

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Two of the main pathologies characterizing dysferlinopathies are disrupted muscle membrane repair and chronic inflammation, which lead to symptoms of muscle weakness and wasting. Here, we used recombinant human Galectin-1 (rHsGal-1) as a therapeutic for LGMD2B mouse and human models. Various redox and multimerization states of Gal-1 show that rHsGal-1 is the most effective form in both increasing muscle repair and decreasing inflammation, due to its monomer-dimer equilibrium. Dose-response testing shows an effective 25-fold safety profile between 0.54 and 13.5 mg/kg rHsGal-1 in Bla/J mice. Mice treated weekly with rHsGal-1 showed downregulation of canonical NF-κB inflammation markers, decreased muscle fat deposition, upregulated anti-inflammatory cytokines, increased membrane repair, and increased functional movement compared to non-treated mice. Gal-1 treatment also resulted in a positive self-upregulation loop of increased endogenous Gal-1 expression independent of NF-κB activation. A similar reduction in disease pathologies in patient-derived human cells demonstrates the therapeutic potential of Gal-1 in LGMD2B patients.

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