C.E. van den Brink
Utrecht University
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Featured researches published by C.E. van den Brink.
Developmental Biology | 1985
A. Feijen; P. T. Van Der Saag; C.E. van den Brink; S.W. de Laat
Differentiated clonal cell lines were isolated from pluripotent P19 embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells treated as aggregates with retinoic acid. Two were characterized in detail. The lines differ in morphology, proliferation rate, the production of plasminogen activator, and in their mitogenic response to insulin but both produce extracellular matrix proteins and can be serially passaged over extended periods, in contrast to differentiated derivatives of many other EC lines. Further, both lines have receptors for and respond mitogenically to epidermal growth factor (EGF). Endogenous phosphorylation of several proteins, including the EGF receptor (150 kDa) and a 38-kDa protein, is induced by EGF in membranes isolated from these cells. Preincubation of membranes with EGF renders them able to catalyze phosphorylation of tyrosine residues in exogenously added peptide substrates. High voltage electrophoresis confirmed the tyrosine specificity of the phosphorylation on the 150- and 38-kDa bands. By contrast, similar experiments in undifferentiated cells showed that intact P19 EC neither bind nor respond to EGF mitogenically and EGF induces no changes in phosphorylation in isolated membranes.
Experimental Cell Research | 1986
A. Feijen; Wouter H. Moolenaar; C.E. van den Brink; S.W. de Laat
Aggregation of pluripotent P19 embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells in the presence of DMSO induces differentiation to various mesodermal cell types, including spontaneously contracting muscle. We have established clonal cell lines from these cultures and characterized one (MES-1) in particular for its response to growth factors. In contrast to the undifferentiated stem cells, but as a number of myoblast and muscle cell lines, MES-1 cells respond to both carbachol and bradykinin by the rapid release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores. In addition, MES-1 express receptors for and respond mitogenically to epidermal growth factor (EGF) and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF). Isolated membranes from these cells retain the capacity to bind both ligands; addition of EGF to membranes induces endogenous phosphorylation of several proteins, including the EGF receptor itself and a 38 kD protein, while addition of PDGF specifically induces phosphorylation of the PDGF receptor. By contrast, other derivatives of P19, isolated from retinoic acid (RA)-treated aggregates and resembling neuroectodermal or endodermal cell types respond only to EGF; PDGF neither binds nor induces phosphorylation and a mitogenic response in these cells. During differentiation from EC cells therefore MES-1 cells developed a combination of growth factor receptor characteristics typical of somatic mesodermal cells and indicate that such receptors on EC-derived mesodermal cells are also functional.
Developmental Biology | 1987
C.E. van den Brink; S.W. de Laat
The rate at which P19 embryonal carcinoma cells in monolayer culture become anchorage dependent during differentiation induced by retinoic acid (RA) was investigated. In both nonsynchronized cultures and cultures synchronized by mitotic selection, the ability to grow in semisolid medium, characteristic of the malignant stem cell, decreased after a lag period of about 12 hr in the continuous presence of RA, prior to an increase in cell generation time. However, striking differences between synchronized and nonsynchronized cultures were observed in their commitment to differentiation following RA removal. After only 2 hr of exposure to RA, synchronized cells continued a program of differentiation in which they became anchorage dependent, while at least 24 hr of exposure was required for exponentially growing cells to become similarly committed. Induction of anchorage dependence by RA was also strikingly cell cycle dependent; 2 or 4 hr of exposure of synchronized cells to RA in G1 phase, when the intrinsic capacity for soft agar growth is low, was sufficient to commit cells to anchorage dependence, but a similar exposure in S phase was not. Together, these results suggested that interactions between cells in different cell cycle phases in asynchronous cultures influenced commitment since exposure to RA for more than one cycle (13 hr) was required for all cells to become anchorage dependent. Increased plasminogen activator secretion and epidermal growth factor binding, markers of certain differentiated cell types, increased only 3 and 5 days after RA addition, respectively, and were not induced by pulsed exposure to RA of less than 24 hr, even in synchronized cells.
Developmental Biology | 1984
C.E. van den Brink; P. T. Van Der Saag; S.W. de Laat
Time-lapse films were made of PC13 embryonal carcinoma cells, synchronized by mitotic shake off, in the absence and presence of retinoic acid. Using a method based on the transition probability model, cell cycle parameters were determined during the first five generations following synchronization. In undifferentiated cells, cell cycle parameters remained identical for the first four generations, the generation time being 11-12 hr. In differentiating cells, with retinoic acid added at the beginning of the first cycle, the first two generations were the same as controls. The duration of the third generation, however, was increased to 15.7 hr while the fourth and fifth generation were approximately 20 hr, the same as in exponentially growing, fully differentiated cells. The increase in generation time of dividing cells was principally due to an increase in the length of S phase. Cell death induced by retinoic acid also occurred principally in the third and subsequent generations. Cell population growth was then significantly less than that expected from the generation time derived from cycle analysis of dividing cells. Cells lysed frequently as sister pairs suggesting susceptibility to retinoic acid toxicity determined in a generation prior to death. Morphological differentiation, as estimated by the area of substrate occupied by cells, was shown to begin in the second cell cycle after retinoic acid addition. These results demonstrate that as in the early mammalian embryo, differentiation of embryonal carcinoma cells to an endoderm-like cell is also accompanied by a decrease in growth rate but that this is preceded by acquisition of the morphology characteristic of the differentiated progeny.
Developmental Biology | 1986
Gerry T. Snoek; C.E. van den Brink; P. T. Van Der Saag; S.W. de Laat
We have characterized effects of phorbol, 12-myristate 13 acetate (PMA) on growth and differentiation in a nullipotent embryonal carcinoma (EC) cell line, F9, in a pluripotent EC line, P19, and in the differentiated derivatives of these cells, In P19EC and F9EC PMA addition resulted in inhibition of growth, while in the differentiated derivates PMA was mitogenic. PMA did not induce differentiation in EC cells but potentiated the retinoic acid (RA) induced differentiation in P19EC, although, not in F9EC. Rapid morphological changes by PMA were seen in P19EC and two differentiated derivatives which represent different stages of differentiation. In F9 no rapid morphological changes were induced by PMA. Using [3H]phorbol dibutyrate as a ligand we showed that during differentiation into endoderm-like cells the number of phorbol ester receptors increases, while in epithelial-like derivatives no increase is found. In differentiated cells with an increased number of phorbol ester receptors, the cytoplasmic Ca2+- and phospholipid-dependent protein kinase (the putative receptor for phorbol esters) activity was also increased. Only in those derivatives where the number of phorbol ester receptors is increased, is the binding of epidermal growth factor (EGF) inhibited by PMA. These results suggest a relationship between levels of expression of phorbol ester receptors, cytoplasmic protein kinase C and biological effects, namely rapid morphological changes, altered growth, potentiation of RA induced differentiation, and inhibition of EGF binding.
Clinical Endocrinology | 2003
Harry Vermeer; Brenda I. Hendriks-Stegeman; C.E. van den Brink; P. T. Van Der Saag; B. van der Burg; S.C. van Buul-Offers; M. Jansen
objective Some patients develop side‐effects even on relatively low doses of topically administered glucocorticoids (GCs), while others appear to be less sensitive to GCs. We have developed and validated a bioassay which can measure glucocorticoid bioavailability directly from small amounts of human serum to help elucidate underlying mechanisms.
Toxicological Sciences | 1999
Juliette Legler; C.E. van den Brink; A. Brouwer; Albertinka J. Murk; P. T. Van Der Saag; A D Vethaak; B. van der Burg
Nature | 1993
W. W. M. Pijnappel; H. F. J. Hendriks; Gert E. Folkers; C.E. van den Brink; E. J. Dekker; C. Edelenbosch; P. T. Van Der Saag; Antony J. Durston
Cell Growth & Differentiation | 1998
E. Sonneveld; C.E. van den Brink; B.-J. M. Van Der Leede; R.-K. A. M. Schulkes; M. Petkovich; B. van der Burg; P. T. Van Der Saag
Teratology | 1984
C.E. van den Brink; P. T. Van Der Saag; S.W. de Laat