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Dive into the research topics where Herman Meurs is active.

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Featured researches published by Herman Meurs.


Respiratory Research | 2006

Muscarinic receptor signaling in the pathophysiology of asthma and COPD

Reinoud Gosens; Johan Zaagsma; Herman Meurs; Andrew J. Halayko

Anticholinergics are widely used for the treatment of COPD, and to a lesser extent for asthma. Primarily used as bronchodilators, they reverse the action of vagally derived acetylcholine on airway smooth muscle contraction. Recent novel studies suggest that the effects of anticholinergics likely extend far beyond inducing bronchodilation, as the novel anticholinergic drug tiotropium bromide can effectively inhibit accelerated decline of lung function in COPD patients. Vagal tone is increased in airway inflammation associated with asthma and COPD; this results from exaggerated acetylcholine release and enhanced expression of downstream signaling components in airway smooth muscle. Vagally derived acetylcholine also regulates mucus production in the airways. A number of recent research papers also indicate that acetylcholine, acting through muscarinic receptors, may in part regulate pathological changes associated with airway remodeling. Muscarinic receptor signalling regulates airway smooth muscle thickening and differentiation, both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, acetylcholine and its synthesizing enzyme, choline acetyl transferase (ChAT), are ubiquitously expressed throughout the airways. Most notably epithelial cells and inflammatory cells generate acetylcholine, and express functional muscarinic receptors. Interestingly, recent work indicates the expression and function of muscarinic receptors on neutrophils is increased in COPD. Considering the potential broad role for endogenous acetylcholine in airway biology, this review summarizes established and novel aspects of muscarinic receptor signaling in relation to the pathophysiology and treatment of asthma and COPD.


Trends in Pharmacological Sciences | 2003

Arginase and asthma: novel insights into nitric oxide homeostasis and airway hyperresponsiveness

Herman Meurs; Harm Maarsingh; Johan Zaagsma

For many years it has been supposed that the production of an excess of nitric oxide (NO) by inducible NO synthase (iNOS) plays a major role in inflammatory diseases, including asthma. However, recent studies indicate that a deficiency of beneficial, bronchodilating constitutive NOS (cNOS)-derived NO is important in allergen-induced airway hyperresponsiveness. Although several mechanisms are proposed to explain the reduction of cNOS activity, reduced substrate availability, caused by a combination of increased arginase activity and decreased cellular uptake of L-arginine, appears to play a key role. Recent evidence also indicates that iNOS-induced pathophysiological effects involve substrate deficiency. Thus, at low concentrations of L-arginine iNOS produces both NO and superoxide anions, which results in the increased synthesis of the highly reactive, detrimental oxidant peroxynitrite. Based on these observations, we propose that a relative deficiency of NO caused by increased arginase activity and altered L-arginine homeostasis is a major factor in the pathology of asthma.


European Respiratory Journal | 2007

Inhibition of allergen-induced airway remodelling by tiotropium and budesonide: a comparison

Isabella Bos; Reinoud Gosens; Anetta Zuidhof; Dedmer Schaafsma; A. J. Halayko; Herman Meurs; Johan Zaagsma

Chronic inflammation in asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease drives pathological structural remodelling of the airways. Using tiotropium bromide, acetylcholine was recently identified as playing a major regulatory role in airway smooth muscle remodelling in a guinea pig model of ongoing allergic asthma. The aim of the present study was to investigate other aspects of airway remodelling and to compare the effectiveness of tiotropium to the glucocorticosteroid budesonide. Ovalbumin-sensitised guinea pigs were challenged for 12 weeks with aerosolised ovalbumin. The ovalbumin induced airway smooth muscle thickening, hypercontractility of tracheal smooth muscle, increased pulmonary contractile protein (smooth-muscle myosin) abundance, mucous gland hypertrophy, an increase in mucin 5 subtypes A and C (MUC5AC)-positive goblet cell numbers and eosinophilia. It was reported previously that treatment with tiotropium inhibits airway smooth muscle thickening and contractile protein expression, and prevents tracheal hypercontractility. This study demonstrates that tiotropium also fully prevented allergen-induced mucous gland hypertrophy, and partially reduced the increase in MUC5AC-positive goblet cell numbers and eosinophil infiltration. Treatment with budesonide also prevented airway smooth muscle thickening, contractile protein expression, tracheal hypercontractility and mucous gland hypertrophy, and partially reduced MUC5AC-positive goblet cell numbers and eosinophilia. This study demonstrates that tiotropium and budesonide are similarly effective in inhibiting several aspects of airway remodelling, providing further evidence that the beneficial effects of tiotropium bromide might exceed those of bronchodilation.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2002

Increased arginase activity underlies allergen‐induced deficiency of cNOS‐derived nitric oxide and airway hyperresponsiveness

Herman Meurs; Sue McKay; Harm Maarsingh; Marco A M Hamer; Lejla Macic; Niek Molendijk; Johan Zaagsma

A deficiency of constitutive nitric oxide synthase (cNOS)‐derived nitric oxide (NO), due to reduced availability of L‐arginine, importantly contributes to allergen‐induced airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) after the early asthmatic reaction (EAR). Since cNOS and arginase use L‐arginine as a common substrate, we hypothesized that increased arginase activity is involved in the allergen‐induced NO deficiency and AHR. Using a guinea‐pig model of allergic asthma, we addressed this hypothesis by examining the effects of the specific arginase inhibitor Nω‐hydroxy‐nor‐L‐arginine (nor‐NOHA) on the responsiveness to methacholine of isolated perfused tracheae from unchallenged control animals and from animals 6 h after ovalbumin challenge. Arginase activity in these preparations was investigated by measuring the conversion of L‐[14C]arginine to [14C]urea. Airways from allergen‐challenged animals showed a 2 fold (P<0.001) increase in responsiveness to intraluminal (IL) administration of methacholine compared to controls. A similar hyperresponsiveness (1.8 fold, P<0.01) was observed in control airways incubated with the NOS inhibitor Nω‐nitro‐L‐arginine methyl ester (L‐NAME, 0.1 mM, IL), while L‐NAME had no further effect on the airways from challenged animals. Remarkably, 5 μM nor‐NOHA (IL) normalized the hyperresponsiveness of challenged airways to basal control (P<0.001), and this effect was fully reversed again by 0.1 mM L‐NAME (P<0.05). Moreover, arginase activity in homogenates of the hyperresponsive airways was 3.5 fold (P<0.001) enhanced compared to controls. The results indicate that enhanced arginase activity contributes to allergen‐induced deficiency of cNOS‐derived NO and AHR after the EAR, presumably by competition with cNOS for the common substrate, L‐arginine. This is the first demonstration that arginase is involved in the pathophysiology of asthma.


Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society | 2009

Airway structural components drive airway smooth muscle remodeling in asthma.

Bart G. J. Dekkers; Harm Maarsingh; Herman Meurs; Reinoud Gosens

Chronic asthma is an inflammatory airways disease characterized by pathological changes in the airway smooth muscle (ASM) bundle that contribute to airway obstruction and hyperresponsiveness. Remodeling of the ASM is associated with an increased smooth muscle mass, involving components of cellular hypertrophy and hyperplasia, and changes in the phenotype of the muscle that facilitate proliferative, synthetic and contractile functions. These changes are considered major contributing factors to the pathophysiology of asthma, because of their role in exaggerated airway narrowing. The mechanisms that regulate changes in ASM mass and phenotype are incompletely understood, but likely involve the regulatory role of mediators and growth factors secreted from inflammatory cells on ASM cell proliferation and phenotype. An alternative hypothesis is that cellular and structural components that together constitute the airway wall, such as the airway epithelium, airway nerves, and the extracellular matrix, interact with the ASM bundle to facilitate changes in smooth muscle phenotype and function that drive remodeling under inflammatory conditions. This review discusses the mechanisms by which structural components of the airway wall communicate with the ASM bundle to regulate remodeling and discusses these mechanisms in the context of the pathophysiology of asthma.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 1990

Characterization of the muscarinic receptor subtype involved in phosphoinositide metabolism in bovine tracheal smooth muscle

Af Roffel; Herman Meurs; Carolina Elzinga; Johan Zaagsma

1 The muscarinic receptor subtype involved in the methacholine‐induced enhancement of phosphoinositide metabolism in bovine tracheal smooth muscle was identified by using the M2‐selective antagonist AF‐DX 116 and the M3‐selective antagonist 4‐diphenylacetoxy‐N‐methylpiperidine (4‐DAMP) methobromide, in addition to the M1‐selective antagonist pirenzepine, in a classical Schild analysis. 2 All the antagonists shifted the methacholine dose‐response curve to the right in a parallel and concentration‐dependent fashion, yielding Schild plots with slopes not significantly different from unity. The pA2 values (6.94, 6.32 and 8.54 for pirenzepine, AF‐DX 116 and 4‐DAMP methobromide respectively) indicate that it is the M3 (smooth muscle/glandular), but not the M2 (cardiac) muscarinic receptor subtype, present in this tissue, that mediates phosphoinositide turnover, in accordance with our previous contractile studies. 3 The results provide additional evidence for the involvement of phosphoinositide turnover in the pharmacomechanical coupling between muscarinic receptor stimulation and contraction in (bovine tracheal) smooth muscle.


Naunyn-schmiedebergs Archives of Pharmacology | 2008

Arginase and pulmonary diseases

Harm Maarsingh; Tonio Pera; Herman Meurs

Recent studies have indicated that arginase, which converts l-arginine into l-ornithine and urea, may play an important role in the pathogenesis of various pulmonary disorders. In asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and cystic fibrosis, increased arginase activity in the airways may contribute to obstruction and hyperresponsiveness of the airways by inducing a reduction in the production of bronchodilatory nitric oxide (NO) that results from its competition with constitutive (cNOS) and inducible (iNOS) NO synthases for their common substrate. In addition, reduced l-arginine availability to iNOS induced by arginase may result in the synthesis of both NO and the superoxide anion by this enzyme, thereby enhancing the production of peroxynitrite, which has procontractile and pro-inflammatory actions. Increased synthesis of l-ornithine by arginase may also contribute to airway remodelling in these diseases. l-Ornithine is a precursor of polyamines and l-proline, and these metabolic products may promote cell proliferation and collagen production, respectively. Increased arginase activity may also be involved in other fibrotic disorders of the lung, including idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Finally, through its action of inducing reduced levels of vasodilating NO, increased arginase activity has been associated with primary and secondary forms of pulmonary hypertension. Drugs targeting the arginase pathway could have therapeutic potential in these diseases.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Activation of WNT / β-Catenin Signaling in Pulmonary Fibroblasts by TGF-β1 Is Increased in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Hoeke A. Baarsma; Anita I.R. Spanjer; Gertruud Haitsma; Lilian H.J.M. Engelbertink; Herman Meurs; Marnix Jonker; Wim Timens; Dirkje S. Postma; Huib Kerstjens; Reinoud Gosens

Background Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by abnormal extracellular matrix (ECM) turnover. Recently, activation of the WNT/β-catenin pathway has been associated with abnormal ECM turnover in various chronic diseases. We determined WNT-pathway gene expression in pulmonary fibroblasts of individuals with and without COPD and disentangled the role of β-catenin in fibroblast phenotype and function. Methods We assessed the expression of WNT-pathway genes and the functional role of β-catenin, using MRC-5 human lung fibroblasts and primary pulmonary fibroblasts of individuals with and without COPD. Results Pulmonary fibroblasts expressed mRNA of genes required for WNT signaling. Stimulation of fibroblasts with TGF-β1, a growth factor important in COPD pathogenesis, induced WNT-5B, FZD8, DVL3 and β-catenin mRNA expression. The induction of WNT-5B, FZD6, FZD8 and DVL3 mRNA by TGF-β1 was higher in fibroblasts of individuals with COPD than without COPD, whilst basal expression was similar. Accordingly, TGF-β1 activated β-catenin signaling, as shown by an increase in transcriptionally active and total β-catenin protein expression. Furthermore, TGF-β1 induced the expression of collagen1α1, α-sm-actin and fibronectin, which was attenuated by β-catenin specific siRNA and by pharmacological inhibition of β-catenin, whereas the TGF-β1-induced expression of PAI-1 was not affected. The induction of transcriptionally active β-catenin and subsequent fibronectin deposition induced by TGF-β1 were enhanced in pulmonary fibroblasts from individuals with COPD. Conclusions β-catenin signaling contributes to ECM production by pulmonary fibroblasts and contributes to myofibroblasts differentiation. WNT/β-catenin pathway expression and activation by TGF-β1 is enhanced in pulmonary fibroblasts from individuals with COPD. This suggests an important role of the WNT/β-catenin pathway in regulating fibroblast phenotype and function in COPD.


European Respiratory Journal | 2008

Airway hyperresponsiveness in asthma: lessons from in vitro model systems and animal models

Herman Meurs; Reinoud Gosens; Johan Zaagsma

Airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) is a hallmark clinical symptom of asthma. At least two components of AHR have been identified: 1) baseline AHR, which is persistent and presumably caused by airway remodelling due to chronic recurrent airway inflammation; and 2) acute and variable AHR, which is associated with an episodic increase in airway inflammation due to environmental factors such as allergen exposure. Despite intensive research, the mechanisms underlying acute and chronic AHR are poorly understood. Owing to the complex variety of interactive processes that may be involved, in vitro model systems and animal models are indispensable to the unravelling of these mechanisms at the cellular and molecular level. The present paper focuses on a number of translational studies addressing the emerging central role of the airway smooth muscle cell, as a multicompetent cell involved in acute airway constriction as well as structural changes in the airways, in the pathophysiology of airway hyperresponsiveness.


European Respiratory Journal | 2011

Tiotropium inhibits pulmonary inflammation and remodelling in a guinea pig model of COPD

Tonio Pera; Anetta Zuidhof; J. Valadas; Marieke Smit; Regina Schoemaker; Reinoud Gosens; Harm Maarsingh; Johan Zaagsma; Herman Meurs

Airway remodelling and emphysema are major structural abnormalities in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). In addition, pulmonary vascular remodelling may occur and contribute to pulmonary hypertension, a comorbidity of COPD. Increased cholinergic activity in COPD contributes to airflow limitation and, possibly, to inflammation and airway remodelling. This study aimed to investigate the role of acetylcholine in pulmonary inflammation and remodelling using an animal model of COPD. To this aim, guinea pigs were instilled intranasally with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) twice weekly for 12 weeks and were treated, by inhalation, with the long-acting muscarinic receptor antagonist tiotropium. Repeated LPS exposure induced airway and parenchymal neutrophilia, and increased goblet cell numbers, lung hydroxyproline content, airway wall collagen and airspace size. Furthermore, LPS increased the number of muscularised microvessels in the adventitia of cartilaginous airways. Tiotropium abrogated the LPS-induced increase in neutrophils, goblet cells, collagen deposition and muscularised microvessels, but had no effect on emphysema. In conclusion, tiotropium inhibits remodelling of the airways as well as pulmonary inflammation in a guinea pig model of COPD, suggesting that endogenous acetylcholine plays a major role in the pathogenesis of this disease.

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Harm Maarsingh

Palm Beach Atlantic University

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Dirkje S. Postma

University Medical Center Groningen

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