Abstract

Abstract Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most aggressive, invasive, and malignant primary brain cancer whose standard of care for nearly 20 years has been surgical resection followed by radiotherapy and temozolomide (TMZ) treatment, resulting in a median survival of 15 months following diagnosis. Heterogenous tumor cell populations that evade resection and develop chemoradiation resistance highlight the need for novel therapies that can target both the migratory and proliferative nature of GBM cells. Galectin-3, a carbohydrate-binding protein overexpressed in the GBM parenchyma and stromal astrocytes, is a potent modulator of cell proliferation, migration, angiogenesis, T-cell inhibition, and M2 macrophage polarization, and is seen to increase following TMZ and radiation treatment. Heightened Galectin-3 expression levels correlate to lower survival in glioma patients, thus greatly underscoring the need for targeting Galectin-3 in conjunction with initial standard-of-care treatment. Here, we characterize the therapeutic effects of a brain-penetrant monoclonal anti-Galectin-3 antibody (Gal3 Ab) we have developed for its ability to inhibit GBM growth and migration in several in vitro assays and in vivo heterotopic and orthotopic mouse models. Our Gal3 Ab significantly decreases cell viability, neurosphere migration, and cell invasion in vitro in the presence of full length or truncated Gal3, whose expression and secretion in GBM cells is enhanced following short and long-term TMZ stimulation. We find that Galectin-3 directly binds to EGFR, amplified in ~40% of GBM patients, as well as its most commonly mutated form, EGFRvIII, and our Gal3 Ab can block these bindings, decrease EGFR activation, and alter EGFR localization. In vivo, our Gal3 Ab decreases tumor burden and improves survival in combination with temozolomide, compared to standard-of-care treatment alone in multiple cell-line models. Our pre-clinical studies highlight the potential for our novel Gal3 antibody to further improve TMZ efficacy and benefit GBM patients by diminishing tumor cell migration and slowing tumor growth.

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