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Dive into the research topics where G.F.J.M. Vrensen is active.

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Featured researches published by G.F.J.M. Vrensen.


Biophysical Journal | 2003

Nonresonant Confocal Raman Imaging of DNA and Protein Distribution in Apoptotic Cells

N. Uzunbajakava; Aufrid T.M. Lenferink; Yvonne M. Kraan; E. Volokhina; G.F.J.M. Vrensen; Jan Greve; Cornelis Otto

Nonresonant confocal Raman imaging has been used to map the DNA and the protein distributions in individual single human cells. The images are obtained on an improved homebuilt confocal Raman microscope. After statistical analysis, using singular value decomposition, the Raman images are reconstructed from the spectra covering the fingerprint region. The data are obtained at a step interval of approximately 250 nm and cover a field from 8- to 15- micro m square in size. Dwell times at each pixel are between 0.5 and 2 s, depending on the nature and the state of the cell under investigation. High quality nonresonant Raman images can only be obtained under these conditions using continuous wave high laser powers between 60 and 120 mW. We will present evidence that these laser powers can still safely be used to recover the chemical distributions in fixed cells. The developed Raman imaging method is used to image directly, i.e., without prior labeling, the nucleotide condensation and the protein distribution in the so-called nuclear fragments of apoptotic HeLa cells. In the control (nonapoptotic) HeLa cells, we show, for the first time by Raman microspectroscopy, the presence of the RNA in a cell nucleus.


Experimental Eye Research | 1991

Age-related changes in local water and protein content of human eye lenses measured by Raman microspectroscopy

I. Siebinga; G.F.J.M. Vrensen; F.F.M. de Mul; Jan Greve

The Raman microspectroscopic method was used to determine the local water and protein content in human lenses. In 18 lenses of varying age position-defined water/protein content measurements were carried out along the visual and the equatorial axis. A main characteristic of the human lens is its constant and relatively low protein content. In addition this constant nuclear value is reached within a short distance from the capsular surface. For statistical analysis of age-related changes the data points in individual lenses were piecewise linearized. (1) The mean nuclear water content was calculated from the data points in the inner 80% of the visual axis. (2) The steep drop in water content was linearized using a least-squares linear regression approach. The distance between lenticular surface and the intersection of the regression line with the line representing the nuclear mean was denominated as surface layer width. It proved that: (i) the mean nuclear water content significantly increased with age, (ii) the width of the surface layer was age independent in the anterior and posterior poles of the visual axis, and (iii) in the equatorial axis the surface layer width significantly decreased with age. Seven human lenses with small opaque spots were also investigated. The opaque spots proved to have a normal-for-site water content and some of them were flanked at their capsular side by a zone with a high-for-site water content.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Experimental Eye Research | 2004

A new three-dimensional model of the organization of proteoglycans and collagen fibrils in the human corneal stroma

Linda J. Müller; Elizabeth Pels; Lucas R.H.M. Schurmans; G.F.J.M. Vrensen

The purpose of the present study was to re-evaluate the three-dimensional organization of collagen fibrils and proteoglycans (PGs) in the human corneal stroma using an improved ultrastructural approach. After a short aldehyde prefixation, one half of seven fresh corneal buttons was stained for PGs with Quinolinic Phtalocyanin (QP) or Cupromeronic Blue (CB). Strips of 1 mm width were cut, subsequently treated with aqueous phosphotungstic acid (PTA) and further processed for light and electron microscopy. The other half of the corneas served as control and was routinely processed with OsO4. Embedding was as such that ultrathin sections could be cut precisely parallel (frontal sections) or perpendicular (cross sections) to the corneal surface. The mutual connections between collagen fibrils and PGs were studied and the length of PGs and their mutual distance were measured manually at a calibrated final magnification of 70,000 x. Prefixed fresh corneal tissue treated with QP and CB shows no signs of swelling and exhibits well contrasted PGs. In cross sections PGs form a repeating network of ring-like structures (approximately 45 nm) around the collagen fibrils. In frontal sections PGs are aligned orthogonal to the collagen fibrils, are equidistant (approximately 42 nm) attached to the collagen fibrils along their full length and have a thickness of approximately 11 nm and a length of approximately 54 nm. The observed maximal length of the PGs and the occurrence of ring-like structures enwrapping the collagen fibrils urged us to revisit the prevailing model of maurice (1962) on the organization of the corneal stroma. In the new model hexagonal arranged collagen fibrils are interconnected at regular distances with their next-nearest neighbours by groups of six PGs, attached orthogonal to the circumference of the fibrils. In this way a regular meshwork of ring-like structures enwrapping the collagen fibrils is formed. It is discussed that this new model more convincingly explains corneal resistance to compression and stretching and further rationalizes corneal transparency because of the low refractive index difference between the regularly arranged collagen fibrils and their inter-space filled with PGs.


Brain Research | 2002

Blood-brain barrier integrity is unaltered in human brain cortex with diabetes mellitus.

Jiapei Dai; G.F.J.M. Vrensen; Reinier O. Schlingemann

Diabetes-related cognitive dysfunction has been recognized for many years in humans, but the pathogenesis of this condition is poorly understood. Evidence from animal studies suggests that altered function of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) could be a potential cause contributing to this disease. This study aimed to investigate whether the permeability of the BBB is affected in the brains of persons with diabetes mellitus (DM). On postmortem prefrontal and temporal cortex of diabetic patients and controls, immunohistochemical stainings were carried out using specific antibodies against three proteins (PAL-E, IgG and albumin), which are considered as markers for the vascular permeability status of the BBB. Rare or no PAL-E staining was found in the capillaries of the prefrontal and temporal cortex parenchyma, in both DM and control materials. IgG and albumin were localized in and directly around blood vessel walls in the prefrontal and temporal cortex. No obvious differences in the staining pattern of IgG and albumin were observed between brain samples of persons with DM and controls. This study suggests that the BBB in diabetic patients is well maintained.


Journal of Cataract and Refractive Surgery | 2005

Effect of bag-in-the-lens implantation on posterior capsule opacification in human donor eyes and rabbit eyes

Veva De Groot; Marie-José B.R. Tassignon; G.F.J.M. Vrensen

Purpose: To evaluate bag‐in‐the‐lens implantation by studying the feasibility of implanting a new type of intraocular lens (IOL) and the occurrence of posterior capsule opacification (PCO) in human postmortem eyes and in eyes of living rabbits. Setting: Department of Ophthalmology, University of Antwerp, Belgium, and Netherlands Research Institute of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Methods: The IOL was implanted in 10 postmortem human donor eyes (in vitro study) and in 17 eyes of 10 rabbits (in vivo study). The postmortem capsular bags were cultured for 4 to 6 weeks, and the rabbits were killed 1 to 5 months after implantation. All capsular bags with the bag‐in‐the‐lens were examined by light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. Results: The IOL design was highly effective in restricting lens epithelial cell (LEC) proliferation in the remaining lens bag in human donor eyes and in rabbit eyes. In eyes in which the capsules were not positioned well within the groove of the IOL, LEC proliferation and PCO occurred. Conclusion: Bag‐in‐the‐lens implantation was highly effective in preventing PCO in vitro and in vivo provided the anterior and posterior capsules were secured properly in the peripheral groove of the IOL.


Vision Research | 2008

Morphology of age-related cuneiform cortical cataracts: the case for mechanical stress.

Ralph Michael; Rafael I. Barraquer; Ben Willekens; Jan van Marle; G.F.J.M. Vrensen

We evaluated the gross morphology, location, and fiber cell architecture of equatorial cortical opacities in the aging human lens. Using dark-field stereomicroscopy, we photographed donor lenses in toto and as thick slices. In addition, we investigated the details of the fiber cell architecture using fluorescent staining for membranes and by scanning electron microscopy. We then combined our data with data from recent studies on lens viscoelasticity. We found that small cortical and cuneiform opacities are accompanied by changes in fiber structure and architecture mainly in the equatorial border zone between the lens nucleus and cortex. Because the lens cortex and nucleus have different viscoelastic properties in young and old lenses, we hypothesize that external forces during accommodation cause shear stress predominantly in this border zone. The location of the described changes suggests that these mechanical forces may cause fiber disorganization, small cortical opacities, and ultimately, cuneiform cataracts.


Experimental Eye Research | 2013

Absence of beta-amyloid in cortical cataracts of donors with and without Alzheimer's disease.

Ralph Michael; Jurja Rosandić; Gustavo A. Montenegro; Elvira Lobato; Francisco Tresserra; Rafael I. Barraquer; G.F.J.M. Vrensen

Eye lenses from human donors with and without Alzheimers disease (AD) were studied to evaluate the presence of amyloid in cortical cataract. We obtained 39 lenses from 21 postmortem donors with AD and 15 lenses from age-matched controls provided by the Banco de Ojos para Tratamientos de la Ceguera (Barcelona, Spain). For 17 donors, AD was clinically diagnosed by general physicians and for 4 donors the AD diagnosis was neuropathologically confirmed. Of the 21 donors with AD, 6 had pronounced bilateral cortical lens opacities and 15 only minor or no cortical opacities. As controls, 7 donors with pronounced cortical opacities and 8 donors with almost transparent lenses were selected. All lenses were photographed in a dark field stereomicroscope. Histological sections were analyzed using a standard and a more sensitive Congo red protocol, thioflavin staining and beta-amyloid immunohistochemistry. Brain tissue from two donors, one with cerebral amyloid angiopathy and another with advanced AD-related changes and one cornea with lattice dystrophy were used as positive controls for the staining techniques. Thioflavin, standard and modified Congo red staining were positive in the control brain tissues and in the dystrophic cornea. Beta-amyloid immunohistochemistry was positive in the brain tissues but not in the cornea sample. Lenses from control and AD donors were, without exception, negative after Congo red, thioflavin, and beta-amyloid immunohistochemical staining. The results of the positive control tissues correspond well with known observations in AD, amyloid angiopathy and corneas with lattice dystrophy. The absence of staining in AD and control lenses with the techniques employed lead us to conclude that there is no beta-amyloid in lenses from donors with AD or in control cortical cataracts. The inconsistency with previous studies of Goldstein etxa0al. (2003) and Moncaster etxa0al. (2010), both of which demonstrated positive Congo red, thioflavin, and beta-amyloid immunohistochemical staining in AD and Down syndrome lenses, is discussed.


Experimental Eye Research | 2003

Light scattering of human lens vesicles in vitro

Daxin Tang; Douglas Borchman; Arne K. Schwarz; Marta C. Yappert; G.F.J.M. Vrensen; J. van Marle; Donald B. DuPré

In passing through the lens, light crosses thousands of cell membranes. To explore the possible contribution of lipids to the scattering properties of the lens, we have carried out in vitro studies with lipids extracted from human lenses 1-90 years of age. Sphingomyelin and human lens lipids were extruded into large unilamellar vesicles (LUVs). The intensity of light scattered by human lens LUVs increased with age and lipid hydrocarbon chain order. Hydrocarbon chain order also correlated with light scattering intensity by sphingomyelin LUVs. Light scattered by LUVs composed of sphingomyelin (1-30 mg ml(-1)) was 20 to 100 times more intense than that scattered by the same concentration of alpha-crystallin in aqueous media. Increased lipid hydrocarbon chain order as well as variations in the headgroup and interfacial region of bilayers resulting from lipid compositional changes can influence membrane light scattering properties. In vitro measurements suggest that the contribution to light scattering by lipids may be significant and should not be disregarded in the investigation of factors and components that lead to the increase in light scattering by human lenses with age and cataract.


Experimental Eye Research | 2014

Absence of amyloid-beta in lenses of Alzheimer patients: A confocal Raman microspectroscopic study

Ralph Michael; Cornelis Otto; Aufrid T.M. Lenferink; E. Gelpi; Gustavo A. Montenegro; Jurja Rosandić; F. Tresssera; Rafael I. Barraquer; G.F.J.M. Vrensen

We have compared the protein profiles in plaques and tangles in the hippocampus of post-mortem Alzheimer brains and in opaque and clear regions in the deep cortex of eye lenses of the same donors. From the 7 Alzheimer donors studied, 1 had pronounced bilateral cortical lens opacities, 1 moderate and 5 only minor or no cortical opacities. We focused on beta-sheet levels, a hallmarking property of amyloid-beta, the major protein of plaques and tau protein, the major protein of tangles in Alzheimer brains. Confocal Raman microspectroscopy and imaging was used in combination with hierarchical cluster analysis. Plaques and tangles show high levels of beta-sheets with a beta-sheet to protein ratio of 1.67. This ratio is 1.12 in unaffected brain tissue surrounding the plaques and tangles. In the lenses this ratio is 1.17 independently of the presence or absence of opacities. This major difference in beta-sheet conformation between hippocampus and lens is supported by Congo red and immunostaining of amyloid-beta and tau which were positive for plaques and tangles in the hippocampus but fully negative for the lens irrespective of the presence or absence of opacities. In line with a previous study (Michael etxa0al., 2013) we conclude that cortical lens opacities are not typical for Alzheimer patients and are not hallmarked by accumulation of amyloid-beta, and can thus not be considered as predictors or indicators of Alzheimer disease as claimed by Goldstein etxa0al. (2003).


Ophthalmic Research | 2002

A preliminary study on the prevention of posterior capsule opacification by photodynamic therapy with bacteriochlorin A in rabbits.

Yasmine van Tenten; Hans J. Schuitmaker; Veva De Groot; Ben Willekens; G.F.J.M. Vrensen; Marie-José Tassignon

Purpose: Photodynamic therapy (PDT) with bacteriochlorin a (BCA) has proven to be successful in the treatment of cancers and to be cytocidal for lens epithelial cells (LECs) in culture. The present study aimed to determine whether PDT with BCA is also effective in destroying LECs in the capsular bag in vivo and could therefore be a strategy for prevention of posterior capsule opacification (PCO). Materials and Methods: BCA was obtained by saponification and acid hydrolysis of bacteriochlorophyll a and was formulated in 30% polyethylene glycol, 20% ethanol and 50% water. Nine albino rabbits were anesthesized and both pupils dilated. Extracapsular lens extraction by phacoemulsification was performed on both eyes. One eye of each animal served as control. In the other eye, 1.5 ml BCA (10 or 50 µg/ml) was injected in the capsular bag and after 10 min, the eye was illuminated with a diode laser (wavelength 760 nm) for 10 or 15 min. Six weeks after surgery, the rabbits were sacrificed and the globes were enucleated, the capsular bags and the corneas removed, fixed and examined using stereomicroscopy and light microscopy. Results: In the control capsular bags, extensive proliferation of LECs and formation of a complete ring of Soemmering was found, while in the PDT-treated capsular bags, LEC proliferation was markedly diminished and an incomplete irregular and much thinner ring of Soemmering was formed. Using the presently described application, the corneas of the PDT-treated animals were opaque and swollen and had lost their endothelial lining. Conclusion: PDT with BCA induces cell death in LECs and greatly reduces the formation of a ring of Soemmering. Therefore, it could be a promising novel means of prevention of PCO, provided the total length of the treatment can be substantially reduced and the negative effects on corneal transparency avoided.

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Ben Willekens

Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience

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Rafael I. Barraquer

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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Jan Greve

Moscow State University

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Gustavo A. Montenegro

Autonomous University of Barcelona

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