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Dive into the research topics where Gerrit Koopman is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerrit Koopman.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Differential CD4+ versus CD8+ T-Cell Responses Elicited by Different Poxvirus-Based Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Vaccine Candidates Provide Comparable Efficacies in Primates

Petra Mooij; Sunita S. Balla-Jhagjhoorsingh; Gerrit Koopman; Niels Beenhakker; Patricia van Haaften; Ilona Baak; Ivonne G. Nieuwenhuis; Ivanela Kondova; Ralf Wagner; Hans Wolf; Carmen Elena Gómez; José Luis Nájera; Victoria Jiménez; Mariano Esteban; Jonathan L. Heeney

ABSTRACT Poxvirus vectors have proven to be highly effective for boosting immune responses in diverse vaccine settings. Recent reports reveal marked differences in the gene expression of human dendritic cells infected with two leading poxvirus-based human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccine candidates, New York vaccinia virus (NYVAC) and modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA). To understand how complex genomic changes in these two vaccine vectors translate into antigen-specific systemic immune responses, we undertook a head-to-head vaccine immunogenicity and efficacy study in the pathogenic HIV type 1 (HIV-1) model of AIDS in Indian rhesus macaques. Differences in the immune responses in outbred animals were not distinguished by enzyme-linked immunospot assays, but differences were distinguished by multiparameter fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis, revealing a difference between the number of animals with both CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell responses to vaccine inserts (MVA) and those that elicit a dominant CD4+ T-cell response (NYVAC). Remarkably, vector-induced differences in CD4+/CD8+ T-cell immune responses persisted for more than a year after challenge and even accompanied antigenic modulation throughout the control of chronic infection. Importantly, strong preexposure HIV-1/simian immunodeficiency virus-specific CD4+ T-cell responses did not prove deleterious with respect to accelerated disease progression. In contrast, in this setting, animals with strong vaccine-induced polyfunctional CD4+ T-cell responses showed efficacies similar to those with stronger CD8+ T-cell responses.


Hepatology | 2003

Chronic hepatitis C virus infection established and maintained in chimpanzees independent of dendritic cell impairment

Christine S. Rollier; Joost A. R. Drexhage; Babs E. Verstrepen; Ernst J. Verschoor; Ronald E. Bontrop; Gerrit Koopman; Jonathan L. Heeney

Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in humans is associated with an impairment of dendritic cells (DC). It has been hypothesized that impairment of DC function may be a central mechanism facilitating the establishment of a chronic carrier state. However, the majority of patients studied with DC impairment to date have been identified and, thus, inadvertently selected because of clinical manifestations leading to their diagnosis, which may have been many years following actual infection. We set out to determine whether impaired DC function occurred in the earlier asymptomatic phase of infection and turned to a well‐defined cohort of HCV‐infected chimpanzees in which the specific date of infection and the nature of the inoculum were well characterized. Results revealed that, in contrast to the observations in human subjects with advanced clinical hepatitis, there was neither impairment of the allostimulatory capacity of monocyte‐derived DC from HCV chronic carriers nor impairment of the maturation process. Decreased allostimulatory capacity was only detected in 2 animals and, interestingly, in those that possessed the highest viral loads. Nevertheless, HCV sequences were undetectable in any of the DC derived from HCV‐infected chimpanzees. In conclusion, these findings suggest that the mechanisms of establishing persistent HCV infection are separate and independent from those responsible for impaired DC function. Indeed, the maturation and allostimulatory impairment, as described in patient studies, are not necessary prerequisites but rather possible consequences of persistent and active HCV infection associated with disease progression. (Hepatology 2003;38:851–858).


Immunology Letters | 1999

HIV-1 vaccine-induced immune responses which correlate with protection from SHIV infection: compiled preclinical efficacy data from trials with ten different HIV-1 vaccine candidates.

Jonathan L. Heeney; Lennart Åkerblom; Susan W. Barnett; Willy M. J. M. Bogers; David Davis; Deborah H. Fuller; Gerrit Koopman; Thomas Lehner; Petra Mooij; Bror Morein; Carlo De Giuli Morghen; Brigitte Rosenwirth; Ernst J. Verschoor; Ralf Wagner; Hans Wolf

The specific immune mechanisms necessary and/or sufficient to elicit HIV-vaccine protection remain undefined. Utilising the SHIV rhesus macaque model the immunogenicity as well as the efficacy of ten different HIV-1 vaccine candidates was evaluated. Comparison of the immune responses induced, with the ability of the vaccine to protect from SHIV infection provided a means to determine which type of immune responses were necessary for protection. Vaccine candidates included VLPs, DNA, subunit protein with novel adjuvant formulations, ISCOMs and pox-virus vectors. Protection from SHIV infection was achieved in approximately half of the animals which received a primary intravenous cell-free challenge. The presence of CTL in the absence of other effector responses did not correlate with protection from this route and type of challenge. Virus neutralising antibodies (Nab) appeared to be necessary but alone were insufficient for protection. If Ag-specific IFN-gamma and/or IL-4 as well as lymphoproliferative (LP) responses were found with the lack of a detectable IL-2 response, then protection was not observed. Immunity correlated with the magnitude of Nab responses, beta-chemokines and as well as balanced, qualitative T-helper responses.


Virology | 2008

Systemic neutralizing antibodies induced by long interval mucosally primed systemically boosted immunization correlate with protection from mucosal SHIV challenge

Willy M. J. M. Bogers; David Davis; Ilona Baak; Elaine Kan; Sam Hofman; Yide Sun; Daniella Mortier; Ying Lian; Herman Oostermeijer; Zahra Fagrouch; Rob Dubbes; Martin van der Maas; Petra Mooij; Gerrit Koopman; Ernst J. Verschoor; Johannes P. M. Langedijk; Jun Zhao; Egidio Brocca-Cofano; Marjorie Robert-Guroff; Indresh K. Srivastava; Susan W. Barnett; Jonathan L. Heeney

Immune correlates of vaccine protection from HIV-1 infection would provide important milestones to guide HIV-1 vaccine development. In a proof of concept study using mucosal priming and systemic boosting, the titer of neutralizing antibodies in sera was found to correlate with protection of mucosally exposed rhesus macaques from SHIV infection. Mucosal priming consisted of two sequential immunizations at 12-week intervals with replicating host range mutants of adenovirus type 5 (Ad5hr) expressing the HIV-1(89.6p) env gene. Following boosting with either heterologous recombinant protein or alphavirus replicons at 12-week intervals animals were intrarectally exposed to infectious doses of the CCR5 tropic SHIV(SF162p4). Heterologous mucosal prime systemic boost immunization elicited neutralizing antibodies (Nabs), antibody-dependent cytotoxicity (ADCC), and specific patterns of antibody binding to envelope peptides. Vaccine induced protection did not correlate with the type of boost nor T-cell responses, but rather with the Nab titer prior to exposure.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Aerosol immunization with NYVAC and MVA vectored vaccines is safe, simple, and immunogenic

Max Corbett; Willy M. J. M. Bogers; Jonathan L. Heeney; Stefan Gerber; Christian Genin; Arnaud Didierlaurent; Herman Oostermeijer; Rob Dubbes; Gerco Braskamp; Stéphanie Lerondel; Carmen Elena Gómez; Mariano Esteban; Ralf Wagner; Ivanella Kondova; Petra Mooij; Sunita S. Balla-Jhagjhoorsingh; Niels Beenhakker; Gerrit Koopman; Sjoerd H. van der Burg; Jean-Pierre Kraehenbuhl; Alain Le Pape

Each year, approximately five million people die worldwide from putatively vaccine-preventable mucosally transmitted diseases. With respect to mass vaccination campaigns, one strategy to cope with this formidable challenge is aerosol vaccine delivery, which offers potential safety, logistical, and cost-saving advantages over traditional vaccination routes. Additionally, aerosol vaccination may elicit pivotal mucosal immune responses that could contain or eliminate mucosally transmitted pathogens in a preventative or therapeutic vaccine context. In this current preclinical non-human primate investigation, we demonstrate the feasibility of aerosol vaccination with the recombinant poxvirus-based vaccine vectors NYVAC and MVA. Real-time in vivo scintigraphy experiments with radiolabeled, aerosol-administered NYVAC-C (Clade C, HIV-1 vaccine) and MVA-HPV vaccines revealed consistent mucosal delivery to the respiratory tract. Furthermore, aerosol delivery of the vaccines was safe, inducing no vaccine-associated pathology, in particular in the brain and lungs, and was immunogenic. Administration of a DNA-C/NYVAC-C prime/boost regime resulted in both systemic and anal-genital HIV-specific immune responses that were still detectable 5 months after immunization. Thus, aerosol vaccination with NYVAC and MVA vectored vaccines constitutes a tool for large-scale vaccine efforts against mucosally transmitted pathogens.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Molecular and Functional Characterization of NKG2D, NKp80, and NKG2C Triggering NK Cell Receptors in Rhesus and Cynomolgus Macaques: Monitoring of NK Cell Function during Simian HIV Infection

Roberto Biassoni; Manuela Fogli; Claudia Cantoni; Paola Costa; Romana Conte; Gerrit Koopman; Aurelio Cafaro; Barbara Ensoli; Alessandro Moretta; Lorenzo Moretta; Andrea De Maria

An involvement of innate immunity and of NK cells during the priming of adaptive immune responses has been recently suggested in normal and disease conditions such as HIV infection and acute myelogenous leukemia. The analysis of NK cell-triggering receptor expression has been so far restricted to only NKp46 and NKp30 in Macaca fascicularis. In this study, we extended the molecular and functional characterization to the various NK cell-triggering receptors using PBMC and to the in vitro-derived NK cell populations by cytofluorometry and by cytolytic activity assays. In addition, RT-PCR strategy, cDNA cloning/sequencing, and transient transfections were used to identify and characterize NKp80, NKG2D, CD94/NKG2C, and CD94/NKG2A in M. fascicularis and Macaca mulatta as well as in the signal transducing polypeptide DNAX-activating protein DAP-10. Both M. fascicularis and M. mulatta NK cells express NKp80, NKG2D, and NKG2C molecules, which displayed a high degree of sequence homology with their human counterpart. Analysis of NK cells in simian HIV-infected M. fascicularis revealed reduced surface expression of selected NK cell-triggering receptors associated with a decreased NK cell function only in some animals. Overall surface density of NK cell-triggering receptors on peripheral blood cells and their triggering function on NK cell populations derived in vitro was not decreased compared with uninfected animals. Thus, triggering NK cell receptor monitoring on macaque NK cells is possible and could provide a valuable tool for assessing NK cell function during experimental infections and for exploring possible differences in immune correlates of protection in humans compared with cynomolgus and rhesus macaques undergoing different vaccination strategies.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2015

Potent Immune Responses in Rhesus Macaques Induced by Nonviral Delivery of a Self-amplifying RNA Vaccine Expressing HIV Type 1 Envelope With a Cationic Nanoemulsion

Willy M. J. M. Bogers; Herman Oostermeijer; Petra Mooij; Gerrit Koopman; Ernst J. Verschoor; David Davis; Jeffrey B. Ulmer; Luis A. Brito; Y Cu; K Banerjee; Gillis Otten; Brian J. Burke; Antu K. Dey; Jonathan L. Heeney; Xiaoying Shen; Georgia D. Tomaras; Celia C. LaBranche; David C. Montefiori; Hua-Xin Liao; Barton F. Haynes; Andrew Geall; Susan W. Barnett

Self-amplifying messenger RNA (mRNA) of positive-strand RNA viruses are effective vectors for in situ expression of vaccine antigens and have potential as a new vaccine technology platform well suited for global health applications. The SAM vaccine platform is based on a synthetic, self-amplifying mRNA delivered by a nonviral delivery system. The safety and immunogenicity of an HIV SAM vaccine encoding a clade C envelope glycoprotein formulated with a cationic nanoemulsion (CNE) delivery system was evaluated in rhesus macaques. The HIV SAM vaccine induced potent cellular immune responses that were greater in magnitude than those induced by self-amplifying mRNA packaged in a viral replicon particle (VRP) or by a recombinant HIV envelope protein formulated with MF59 adjuvant, anti-envelope binding (including anti-V1V2), and neutralizing antibody responses that exceeded those induced by the VRP vaccine. These studies provide the first evidence in nonhuman primates that HIV vaccination with a relatively low dose (50 µg) of formulated self-amplifying mRNA is safe and immunogenic.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Clearance of Genotype 1b Hepatitis C Virus in Chimpanzees in the Presence of Vaccine-Induced E1-Neutralizing Antibodies

Babs E. Verstrepen; Erik Depla; Christine S. Rollier; Gwenny Mares; Joost A. R. Drexhage; Sofie Priem; Ernst J. Verschoor; Gerrit Koopman; Christelle Granier; Marlène Dreux; Francxois L. Cosset; Geert Maertens; Jonathan L. Heeney

Accumulating evidence indicates that neutralizing antibodies play an important role in protection from chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Efforts to elicit such responses by immunization with intact heterodimeric E1E2 envelope proteins have met with limited success. To determine whether antigenic sites, which are not exposed by the combined E1E2 heterodimer structure, are capable of eliciting neutralizing antibody responses, we expressed and purified each as separate recombinant proteins E1 and E2, from which the immunodominant hypervariable region (HVR-1) was deleted. Immunization of chimpanzees with either E1 or E2 alone induced antigen-specific T-helper cytokines of similar magnitude. Unexpectedly, the capacity to neutralize HCV was observed in E1 but not in animals immunized with E2 devoid of HVR-1. Furthermore, in vivo only E1-vaccinated animals exposed to the heterologous HCV-1b inoculum cleared HCV infection.


Journal of General Virology | 2008

Immune-response profiles induced by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 vaccine DNA, protein or mixed-modality immunization: increased protection from pathogenic simian-human immunodeficiency virus viraemia with protein/DNA combination

Gerrit Koopman; Daniella Mortier; Sam Hofman; Nathalie Louise Mathy; Marguerite Koutsoukos; Peter Ertl; Phil Overend; Cathy van Wely; Lindy L. Thomsen; Britta Wahren; Gerald Voss; Jonathan L. Heeney

Current data suggest that prophylactic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV) vaccines will be most efficacious if they elicit a combination of adaptive humoral and T-cell responses. Here, we explored the use of different vaccine strategies in heterologous prime-boost regimes and evaluated the breadth and nature of immune responses in rhesus monkeys induced by epidermally delivered plasmid DNA or recombinant HIV proteins formulated in the AS02A adjuvant system. These immunogens were administered alone or as either prime or boost in mixed-modality regimes. DNA immunization alone induced cell-mediated immune (CMI) responses, with a strong bias towards Th1-type cytokines, and no detectable antibodies to the vaccine antigens. Whenever adjuvanted protein was used as a vaccine, either alone or in a regime combined with DNA, high-titre antibody responses to all vaccine antigens were detected in addition to strong Th1- and Th2-type CMI responses. As the vaccine antigens included HIV-1 Env, Nef and Tat, as well as simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)mac239 Nef, the animals were subsequently exposed to a heterologous, pathogenic simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV)89.6p challenge. Protection against sustained high virus load was observed to some degree in all vaccinated groups. Suppression of virus replication to levels below detection was observed most frequently in the group immunized with protein followed by DNA immunization, and similarly in the group immunized with DNA alone. Interestingly, control of virus replication was associated with increased SIV Nef- and Gag-specific gamma interferon responses observed immediately following challenge.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Direct Inoculation of Simian Immunodeficiency Virus from Sooty Mangabeys in Black Mangabeys (Lophocebus aterrimus): First Evidence of AIDS in a Heterologous African Species and Different Pathologic Outcomes of Experimental Infection

Cristian Apetrei; Bobby J. Gormus; Ivona Pandrea; Michael J. Metzger; Peter ten Haaft; Louis N. Martin; Rudolf P. Bohm; Xavier Alvarez; Gerrit Koopman; Michael Murphey-Corb; Ronald S. Veazey; Andrew A. Lackner; Gary B. Baskin; Jonathan L. Heeney; Preston A. Marx

ABSTRACT A unique opportunity for the study of the role of serial passage and cross-species transmission was offered by a series of experiments carried out at the Tulane National Primate Research Center in 1990. To develop an animal model for leprosy, three black mangabeys (BkMs) (Lophocebus aterrimus) were inoculated with lepromatous tissue that had been serially passaged in four sooty mangabeys (SMs) (Cercocebus atys). All three BkMs became infected with simian immunodeficiency virus from SMs (SIVsm) by day 30 postinoculation (p.i.) with lepromatous tissue. One (BkMG140) died 2 years p.i. from causes unrelated to SIV, one (BkMG139) survived for 10 years, whereas the third (BkMG138) was euthanized with AIDS after 5 years. Histopathology revealed a high number of giant cells in tissues from BkMG138, but no SIV-related lesions were found in the remaining two BkMs. Four-color immunofluorescence revealed high levels of SIVsm associated with both giant cells and T lymphocytes in BkMG138 and no detectable SIV in the remaining two. Serum viral load (VL) showed a significant increase (>1 log) during the late stage of the disease in BkMG138, as opposed to a continuous decline in VL in the remaining two BkMs. With the progression to AIDS, neopterin levels increased in BkMG138. This study took on new significance when phylogenetic analysis unexpectedly showed that all four serially inoculated SMs were infected with different SIVsm lineages prior to the beginning of the experiment. Furthermore, the strain infecting the BkMs originated from the last SM in the series. Therefore, the virus infecting BkMs has not been serially passaged. In conclusion, we present the first compelling evidence that direct cross-species transmission of SIV may induce AIDS in heterologous African nonhuman primate (NHP) species. The results showed that cross-species-transmitted SIVsm was well controlled in two of three BkMs for 2 and 10 years, respectively. Finally, this case of AIDS in an African monkey suggests that the dogma of SIV nonpathogenicity in African NHP hosts should be reconsidered.

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Petra Mooij

Biomedical Primate Research Centre

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Willy M. J. M. Bogers

Biomedical Primate Research Centre

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Ernst J. Verschoor

Biomedical Primate Research Centre

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Babs E. Verstrepen

Biomedical Primate Research Centre

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Daniella Mortier

Biomedical Primate Research Centre

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Ivonne G. Nieuwenhuis

Biomedical Primate Research Centre

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Niels Beenhakker

Biomedical Primate Research Centre

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Ronald E. Bontrop

Biomedical Primate Research Centre

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