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Dive into the research topics where Dirk L. Ypey is active.

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Featured researches published by Dirk L. Ypey.


Circulation Research | 2008

Forced Alignment of Mesenchymal Stem Cells Undergoing Cardiomyogenic Differentiation Affects Functional Integration With Cardiomyocyte Cultures

Daniël A. Pijnappels; Martin J. Schalij; Arti A. Ramkisoensing; John van Tuyn; Antoine A.F. de Vries; Arnoud van der Laarse; Dirk L. Ypey; Douwe E. Atsma

Alignment of cardiomyocytes (CMCs) contributes to the anisotropic (direction-related) tissue structure of the heart, thereby facilitating efficient electrical and mechanical activation of the ventricles. This study aimed to investigate the effects of forced alignment of stem cells during cardiomyogenic differentiation on their functional integration with CMC cultures. Labeled neonatal rat (nr) mesenchymal stem cells (nrMSCs) were allowed to differentiate into functional heart muscle cells in different cell-alignment patterns during 10 days of coculture with nrCMCs. Development of functional cellular properties was assessed by measuring impulse transmission across these stem cells between 2 adjacent nrCMC fields, cultured onto microelectrode arrays and previously separated by a laser-dissected channel (230±10 &mgr;m) for nrMSC transplantation. Coatings in these channels were microabraded in a direction (1) parallel or (2) perpendicular to the channel or were (3) left unabraded to establish different cell patterns. Application of cells onto microabraded coatings resulted in anisotropic cell alignment within the channel. Application on unabraded coatings resulted in isotropic (random) alignment. After coculture, conduction across seeded nrMSCs occurred from day 1 (perpendicular and isotropic) or day 6 (parallel) onward. Conduction velocity across nrMSCs at day 10 was highest in the perpendicular (11±0.9 cm/sec; n=12), intermediate in the isotropic (7.1±1 cm/sec; n=11) and lowest in the parallel configuration (4.9±1 cm/sec; n=11) (P<0.01). nrCMCs and fibroblasts served as positive and negative control, respectively. Also, immunocytochemical analysis showed alignment-dependent increases in connexin 43 expression. In conclusion, forced alignment of nrMSCs undergoing cardiomyogenic differentiation affects the time course and degree of functional integration with surrounding cardiac tissue.


European Biophysics Journal | 1999

Modelling action potentials and membrane currents of mammalian skeletal muscle fibres in coherence with potassium concentration changes in the T-tubular system

W. Wallinga; S. L. Meijer; M. J. Alberink; M. Vliek; E. D. Wienk; Dirk L. Ypey

Abstract During prolonged activity the action potentials of skeletal muscle fibres change their shape. A model study was made as to whether potassium accumulation and removal in the tubular space is important with respect to those variations. Classical Hodgkin-Huxley type sodium and (potassium) delayed rectifier currents were used to determine the sarcolemmal and tubular action potentials. The resting membrane potential was described with a chloride conductance, a potassium conductance (inward rather than outward rectifier) and a sodium conductance (minor influence) in both sarcolemmal and tubular membranes. The two potassium conductances, the Na-K pump and the potassium diffusion between tubular compartments and to the external medium contributed to the settlement of the potassium concentration in the tubular space. This space was divided into 20 coupled concentric compartments. In the longitudinal direction the fibre was a cable series of 56 short segments. All the results are concerned with one of the middle segments. During action potentials, potassium accumulates in the tubular space by outward current through both the delayed and inward rectifier potassium conductances. In between the action potentials the potassium concentration decreases in all compartments owing to potassium removal processes. In the outer tubular compartment the diffusion-driven potassium export to the bathing solution is the main process. In the inner tubular compartment, potassium removal is mainly effected by re-uptake into the sarcoplasm by means of the inward rectifier and the Na-K pump. This inward transport of potassium strongly reduces the positive shift of the tubular resting membrane potential and the consequent decrease of the action potential amplitude caused by inactivation of the sodium channels. Therefore, both potassium removal processes maintain excitability of the tubular membrane in the centre of the fibre, promote excitation-contraction coupling and contribute to the prevention of fatigue.


The FASEB Journal | 2003

Besides affecting intracellular calcium signaling, 2-APB reversibly blocks gap junctional coupling in confluent monolayers, thereby allowing measurement of single-cell membrane currents in undissociated cells

Erik G. A. Harks; Jesus P. Camiña; P.H.J. Peters; Dirk L. Ypey; Wim J.J.M. Scheenen; Everardus J.J. van Zoelen; A.P.R. Theuvenet

2‐Aminoethoxydiphenyl borate (2‐APB) has been widely used as a blocker of the IP3 receptor and TRP channels, including store‐operated calcium channels. We now show in monolayers of normal rat kidney cells (NRK/49F) that 2‐APB completely and reversibly blocks gap junctional intercellular communication at concentrations similar to that required for inhibition of PGF2α‐induced increases in intracellular calcium. Gap junctional conductances between NRK cells were estimated with single‐electrode patch‐clamp measurements and were fully blocked by 2‐APB (50 µM), when applied extracellularly but not via the patch pipette. Half maximal inhibition (IC50) of electrical coupling in NRK cells was achieved at 5.7 µM. Similar results were obtained for human embryonic kidney epithelial cells (HEK293/tsA201) with an IC50 of 10.3 µM. Using 2‐APB as an electrical uncoupler of monolayer cells, we could thus measure inward rectifier potassium, L‐type calcium, and calcium‐dependent chloride membrane currents in confluent NRK monolayers, with properties similar to those in dissociated NRK cells in the absence of 2‐APB. The electrical uncoupling action described here is a new 2‐APB property that promises to provide a powerful pharmacological tool to study single‐cell properties in cultured confluent monolayers and intact tissues by electrical and chemical uncoupling of the cells without the need of prior dissociation.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 1983

Micro-CO2-incubator for use on a microscope

Can Ince; Dirk L. Ypey; Martina M. C. Diesselhoff-den Dulk; Jacques A.M. Visser; Arie De Vos; Ralph van Furth

A simple micro-CO2-incubator designed for use on the stage of an inverted microscope is described. This micro-incubator is easy to use, offers a handy tool for the culture of cells under the microscope and its performance compares well with that of a conventional CO2-incubator. A standard disposable culture dish can be placed in the micro-incubator. The culture medium is covered by a gas-permeable layer of mineral oil, this protects the culture from the environment without affecting the culture conditions and allows easy cell manipulation under microscopical control.


The FASEB Journal | 2011

Epigenetics: DNA demethylation promotes skeletal myotube maturation

Marlinda Hupkes; Malin K.B. Jonsson; Wim J.J.M. Scheenen; Walter van Rotterdam; Ana M. Sotoca; Eugene P. van Someren; Marcel A.G. van der Heyden; Toon A.B. van Veen; Roselinde I. van Ravestein-van Os; Susanne Bauerschmidt; Ester Piek; Dirk L. Ypey; Everardus J.J. van Zoelen; Koen J. Dechering

Mesenchymal progenitor cells can be differentiated in vitro into myotubes that exhibit many characteristic features of primary mammalian skeletal muscle fibers. However, in general, they do not show the functional excitation‐contraction coupling or the striated sarcomere arrangement typical of mature myofibers. Epigenetic modifications have been shown to play a key role in regulating the progressional changes in transcription necessary for muscle differentiation. In this study, we demonstrate that treatment of murine C2C12 mesenchymal progenitor cells with 10 μM of the DNA methylation inhibitor 5‐azacytidine (5AC) promotes myogenesis, resulting in myotubes with enhanced maturity as compared to untreated myotubes. Specifically, 5AC treatment resulted in the up‐regulation of muscle genes at the myoblast stage, while at later stages nearly 50% of the 5AC‐treated myotubes displayed a mature, well‐defined sarcomere organization, as well as spontaneous contractions that coincided with action potentials and intracellular calcium transients. Both the percentage of striated myotubes and their contractile activity could be inhibited by 20 nM TTX, 10 μM ryanodine, and 100 μM nifedipine, suggesting that action potential‐induced calcium transients are responsible for these characteristics. Our data suggest that genomic demethylation induced by 5AC overcomes an epigenetic barrier that prevents untreated C2C12 myotubes from reaching full maturity.—Hupkes, M., Jonsson, M. K. B., Scheenen, W. J., van Rotterdam, W., Sotoca, A. M., van Someren, E. P., van der Heyden, M. A. G., van Veen, T. A., van Ravestein‐van Os, R. I., Bauerschmidt, S., Piek, E., Ypey, D. L., van Zoelen, E. J., Dechering, K. J. Epigenetics: DNA demethylation promotes skeletal myotube maturation. FASEB J. 25, 3861–3872 (2011). www.fasebj.org


Cardiovascular Research | 2014

Light-induced termination of spiral wave arrhythmias by optogenetic engineering of atrial cardiomyocytes

Brian O. Bingen; Marc C. Engels; Martin J. Schalij; Wanchana Jangsangthong; Zeinab Neshati; Iolanda Feola; Dirk L. Ypey; Saïd F.A. Askar; Alexander V. Panfilov; Daniël A. Pijnappels; Antoine A.F. de Vries

AIMS Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia and often involves reentrant electrical activation (e.g. spiral waves). Drug therapy for AF can have serious side effects including proarrhythmia, while electrical shock therapy is associated with discomfort and tissue damage. Hypothetically, forced expression and subsequent activation of light-gated cation channels in cardiomyocytes might deliver a depolarizing force sufficient for defibrillation, thereby circumventing the aforementioned drawbacks. We therefore investigated the feasibility of light-induced spiral wave termination through cardiac optogenetics. METHODS AND RESULTS Neonatal rat atrial cardiomyocyte monolayers were transduced with lentiviral vectors encoding light-activated Ca(2+)-translocating channelrhodopsin (CatCh; LV.CatCh∼eYFP↑) or eYFP (LV.eYFP↑) as control, and burst-paced to induce spiral waves rotating around functional cores. Effects of CatCh activation on reentry were investigated by optical and multi-electrode array (MEA) mapping. Western blot analyses and immunocytology confirmed transgene expression. Brief blue light pulses (10 ms/470 nm) triggered action potentials only in LV.CatCh∼eYFP↑-transduced cultures, confirming functional CatCh-mediated current. Prolonged light pulses (500 ms) resulted in reentry termination in 100% of LV.CatCh∼eYFP↑-transduced cultures (n = 31) vs. 0% of LV.eYFP↑-transduced cultures (n = 11). Here, CatCh activation caused uniform depolarization, thereby decreasing overall excitability (MEA peak-to-peak amplitude decreased 251.3 ± 217.1 vs. 9.2 ± 9.5 μV in controls). Consequently, functional coresize increased and phase singularities (PSs) drifted, leading to reentry termination by PS-PS or PS-boundary collisions. CONCLUSION This study shows that spiral waves in atrial cardiomyocyte monolayers can be terminated effectively by a light-induced depolarizing current, produced by the arrhythmogenic substrate itself, upon optogenetic engineering. These results provide proof-of-concept for shockless defibrillation.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 1995

Cell membrane stretch in osteoclasts triggers a self-reinforcing Ca2+ entry pathway.

A. Wiltink; Peter J. Nijweide; W.J.J.M. Scheenen; Dirk L. Ypey; B. Van Duijn

Many cell types respond to mechanical membrane perturbation with intracellular Ca2+ responses. Stretch-activated (SA) ion channels may be involved in such responses. We studied the occurrence as well as the underlying mechanisms of cell membrane stretche-voked responses in fetal chicken osteoclasts using separate and simultaneous patch-clamp and Ca2+ imaging measurements. In the present paper, evidence is presented showing that such responses involve a self-reinforcing mechanism including SA channel activity, Ca2+-activated K+ (KCa) channel activity, membrane potential changes and local and general intracellular Ca2+ ([Ca2+]i) increases. The model we propose is that during membrane stretch, both SA channels and KCa channels open at membrane potential values near the resting membrane potential. SA channel characterization showed that these SA channels are permeable to Ca2+. During membrane stretch, Ca2+ influx through SA channels and hyperpolarization due to KCa channel activity serve as positive feedback, leading ultimately to a Ca2+ wave and cell membrane hyperpolarization. This self-reinforcing mechanism is turned off upon SA channel closure after cessation of membrane stretch. We suggest that this Ca2+entry mechanism plays a role in regulation of osteoclast activity.


Plant Physiology | 1993

Whole-Cell K+ Currents across the Plasma Membrane of Tobacco Protoplasts from Cell-Suspension Cultures.

B. Van Duijn; Dirk L. Ypey; K. R. Libbenga

The whole-cell configuration of the patch clamp technique was used to study both outward and inward ion currents across the plasma membrane of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) protoplasts from cell-suspension cultures. The ion currents across the plasma membrane were analyzed by the application of stepwise potential changes from a holding potential or voltage ramps. In all protoplasts, a voltage- and time-dependent outward rectifying current was present. The conductance increased upon depolarization of the membrane potential (to >0 mV) with a sigmoidal time course. The reversal potential of the outward current shifted in the direction of the K+ equilibrium potential upon changing the external K+ concentration. The outward current did not show inactivation. In addition to the outward rectifying current, in about 30% of the protoplasts, a time- and voltage-dependent inward rectifying current was present as well. The inward rectifying current activated upon hyperpolarization of the membrane potential (<-100 mV) with an exponential time course. The reversal potential of the inward conductance under different ionic conditions was close to the K+ equilibrium potential.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1987

Intracellular K+, Na+ and Cl− concentrations and membrane potential in human moncytes

Can Ince; Bing Thio; Bert van Duijn; Jaap T. van Dissel; Dirk L. Ypey; P. C. J. Leijh

The relationship between the resting membrane potential and the intracellular ionic concentrations in human monocytes was investigated. Cell volume, cell water content, and amount of intracellular K+, Na+, and Cl- were measured to determine the intracellular concentrations of K+ (Ki), Na+ (Nai) and Cl- (Cli) of monocytes, and of lymphocytes and neutrophils. Values found for monocytes were similar to those for neutrophils, i.e., cell volumes were 346 and 345 micron3, respectively, cell water content 78%, and Ki, 128 and 125, Nai, 24 and 26, and Cli, 102 and 103 mmol/l cell water, respectively. Lymphocytes, however, had different values: 181 micron3 cell volume, 77% cell water content, and for Ki, Nai, and Cli, 165, 37, and 91 mmol/l cell water, respectively. The resting membrane potential of cultured human monocytes (range -30 to -40 mV), determined by measurement of the peak potential occurring within the first milliseconds after microelectrode entry, was most dependent on extracellular K+, followed by Cl-, and Na+. The membrane permeability ratio of Cl- to K+ was estimated by use of the constant field equation to be 0.23 (range 0.22 to 0.30).


Circulation | 2007

Resynchronization of Separated Rat Cardiomyocyte Fields With Genetically Modified Human Ventricular Scar Fibroblasts

Daniël A. Pijnappels; John van Tuyn; Antoine A.F. de Vries; Robert W. Grauss; Arnoud van der Laarse; Dirk L. Ypey; Douwe E. Atsma; Martin J. Schalij

Background— Nonresponse to cardiac resynchronization therapy is associated with the presence of slow or nonconducting scar tissue. Genetic modification of scar tissue, aimed at improving conduction, may be a novel approach to achieve effective resynchronization. Therefore, the feasibility of resynchronization with genetically modified human ventricular scar fibroblasts was studied in a coculture model. Methods and Results— An in vitro model was used to study the effects of forced expression of the myocardin (MyoC) gene in human ventricular scar fibroblasts (hVSFs) on resynchronization of 2 rat cardiomyocyte fields separated by a strip of hVSFs. Furthermore, the effects of MyoC expression on the capacity of hVSFs to serve as pacing sites were studied. MyoC-dependent gene activation in hVSFs was examined by gene and immunocytochemical analysis. Forced MyoC expression in hVSFs decreased dyssynchrony, expressed as the activation delay between 2 cardiomyocyte fields (control hVSFs 27.6±0.2 ms [n=11] versus MyoC-hVSFs 3.6±0.3 ms [n=11] at day 8, P<0.01). Also, MyoC-hVSFs could be stimulated electrically, which resulted in simultaneous activation of the 2 adjacent cardiomyocyte fields. Forced MyoC expression in hVSFs led to the expression of various connexin and cardiac ion channel genes. Intracellular measurements of MyoC-hVSFs coupled to surrounding cardiomyocytes showed strongly improved action potential conduction. Conclusions— Forced MyoC gene expression in hVSFs allowed electrical stimulation of these cells and conferred the ability to conduct an electrical impulse at high velocity, which resulted in resynchronization of 2 separated cardiomyocyte fields. Both phenomena appear mediated mainly by MyoC-dependent activation of genes that encode connexins, strongly enforcing intercellular electrical coupling.

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Daniël A. Pijnappels

Leiden University Medical Center

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Martin J. Schalij

Leiden University Medical Center

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Antoine A.F. de Vries

Leiden University Medical Center

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Arnoud van der Laarse

Leiden University Medical Center

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Brian O. Bingen

Leiden University Medical Center

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A.P.R. Theuvenet

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Iolanda Feola

Leiden University Medical Center

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