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Dive into the research topics where Jeanette F. Brunsting is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeanette F. Brunsting.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Rescue of Salivary Gland Function after Stem Cell Transplantation in Irradiated Glands

Isabelle M.A. Lombaert; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Pieter K. Wierenga; Hette Faber; Monique Stokman; Tineke Kok; Willy H. Visser; Harm H. Kampinga; Gerald de Haan; Robert P. Coppes

Head and neck cancer is the fifth most common malignancy and accounts for 3% of all new cancer cases each year. Despite relatively high survival rates, the quality of life of these patients is severely compromised because of radiation-induced impairment of salivary gland function and consequential xerostomia (dry mouth syndrome). In this study, a clinically applicable method for the restoration of radiation-impaired salivary gland function using salivary gland stem cell transplantation was developed. Salivary gland cells were isolated from murine submandibular glands and cultured in vitro as salispheres, which contained cells expressing the stem cell markers Sca-1, c-Kit and Musashi-1. In vitro, the cells differentiated into salivary gland duct cells and mucin and amylase producing acinar cells. Stem cell enrichment was performed by flow cytrometric selection using c-Kit as a marker. In vitro, the cells differentiated into amylase producing acinar cells. In vivo, intra-glandular transplantation of a small number of c-Kit+ cells resulted in long-term restoration of salivary gland morphology and function. Moreover, donor-derived stem cells could be isolated from primary recipients, cultured as secondary spheres and after re-transplantation ameliorate radiation damage. Our approach is the first proof for the potential use of stem cell transplantation to functionally rescue salivary gland deficiency.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1999

In Vivo Chaperone Activity of Heat Shock Protein 70 and Thermotolerance

Ellen A. A. Nollen; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Han Roelofsen; Lee A. Weber; Harm H. Kampinga

ABSTRACT Heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) is thought to play a critical role in the thermotolerance of mammalian cells, presumably due to its chaperone activity. We examined the chaperone activity and cellular heat resistance of a clonal cell line in which overexpression of Hsp70 was transiently induced by means of the tetracycline-regulated gene expression system. This single-cell-line approach circumvents problems associated with clonal variation and indirect effects resulting from constitutive overexpression of Hsp70. The in vivo chaperone function of Hsp70 was quantitatively investigated by using firefly luciferase as a reporter protein. Chaperone activity was found to strictly correlate to the level of Hsp70 expression. In addition, we observed an Hsp70 concentration dependent increase in the cellular heat resistance. In order to study the contribution of the Hsp70 chaperone activity, heat resistance of cells that expressed tetracycline-regulated Hsp70 was compared to thermotolerant cells expressing the same level of Hsp70 plus all of the other heat shock proteins. Overexpression of Hsp70 alone was sufficient to induce a similar recovery of cytoplasmic luciferase activity, as does expression of all Hsps in thermotolerant cells. However, when the luciferase reporter protein was directed to the nucleus, expression of Hsp70 alone was not sufficient to yield the level of recovery observed in thermotolerant cells. In addition, cells expressing the same level of Hsp70 found in heat-induced thermotolerant cells containing additional Hsps showed increased resistance to thermal killing but were more sensitive than thermotolerant cells. These results suggest that the inducible form of Hsp70 contributes to the stress-tolerant state by increasing the chaperone activity in the cytoplasm. However, its expression alone is apparently insufficient for protection of other subcellular compartments to yield clonal heat resistance to the level observed in thermotolerant cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Bag1 Functions In Vivo as a Negative Regulator of Hsp70 Chaperone Activity

Ellen A. A. Nollen; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Jaewhan Song; Harm H. Kampinga; Richard I. Morimoto

ABSTRACT Studies on the Hsp70 chaperone machine in eukaryotes have shown that Hsp70 and Hsp40/Hdj1 family proteins are sufficient to prevent protein misfolding and aggregation and to promote refolding of denatured polypeptides. Additional protein cofactors include Hip and Bag1, identified in protein interaction assays, which bind to and modulate Hsp70 chaperone activity in vitro. Bag1, originally identified as an antiapoptotic protein, forms a stoichiometric complex with Hsp70 and inhibits completely Hsp70-dependent in vitro protein refolding of an unfolded polypeptide. Given its proposed involvement in multiple cell signaling events as a regulator of Raf1, Bcl2, or androgen receptor, we wondered whether Bag1 functions in vivo as a negative regulator of Hsp70. In this study, we demonstrate that Bag1, expressed in mammalian tissue culture cells, has pronounced effects on one of the principal activities of Hsp70, as a molecular chaperone essential for stabilization and refolding of a thermally inactivated protein. The levels of Hsp70 and Bag1 were modulated either by transient transfection or conditional expression in stably transfected lines to achieve levels within the range detected in different mammalian tissue culture cell lines. For example, a twofold increase in the concentration of Bag1 reduced Hsp70-dependent refolding of denatured luciferase by a factor of 2. This effect was titratable, and higher levels of wild-type but not a mutant form of Bag1 further inhibited Hsp70 refolding by up to a factor of 5. The negative effects of Bag1 were also observed in a biochemical analysis of Bag1- or Hsp70-overexpressing cells. The ability of Hsp70 to maintain thermally denatured firefly luciferase in a soluble state was reversed by Bag1, thus providing an explanation for the in vivo chaperone-inhibitory effects of Bag1. Similar effects on Hsp70 were observed with other cytoplasmic isoforms of Bag1 which have in common the carboxyl-terminal Hsp70-binding domain and differ by variable-length amino-terminal extensions. These results provide the first formal evidence that Bag1 functions in vivo as a regulator of Hsp70 and suggest an intriguing complexity for Hsp70-regulatory events.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Modulation of in vivo HSP70 chaperone activity by Hip and Bag-1.

Ellen A. A. Nollen; Alexander E. Kabakov; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Bart Kanon; Jörg Höhfeld; Harm H. Kampinga

The chaperone activity of Hsp70 is influenced by the activities of both positive and negative regulatory proteins. In this study, we provide first time evidence for the stimulating effect of the Hsp70-interacting protein Hip on the chaperone activity in the mammalian cytosol. Overexpressing Hip enhances the refolding of the heat-inactivated reporter enzyme luciferase expressed in hamster lung fibroblasts. Also, it protects luciferase from irreversible denaturation under conditions of ATP depletion. We demonstrate that these stimulating actions depend on both the presence of the central Hsp70-binding site and the amino-terminal homo-oligomerization domain of Hip. The carboxyl terminus (amino acids 257–368) comprising the 7 GGMP repeats (Hsc70-like domain) and the Sti1p-like domain are dispensable for the Hip-mediated stimulation of the cellular chaperone activity. Bag-1, which inhibits the Hsp70 chaperone activity bothin vitro and in vivo, was found to compete with the stimulatory action of Hip. In cells overexpressing both Hip and Bag-1, the inhibitory effects of Bag-1 were found to be dominant. Our results reveal that in vivo a complex level of regulation of the cellular chaperone activity exists that not only depends on the concentration of Hsp70 but also on the concentration, affinity, and intracellular localization of positive and negative coregulators. As the Hsp70 chaperone machine is also protective in the absence of ATP, our data also demonstrate that cycling between an ATP/ADP-bound state is not absolutely required for the Hsp70 chaperone machine to be activein vivo.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

HspB8 Participates in Protein Quality Control by a Non-chaperone-like Mechanism That Requires eIF2α Phosphorylation

Serena Carra; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Herman Lambert; Jacques Landry; Harm H. Kampinga

Aggregation of mutated proteins is a hallmark of many neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntington disease. We previously reported that overexpression of the HspB8·Bag3 chaperone complex suppresses mutated huntingtin aggregation via autophagy. Classically, HspB proteins are thought to act as ATP-independent molecular chaperones that can bind unfolded proteins and facilitate their processing via the help of ATP-dependent chaperones such as the Hsp70 machine, in which Bag3 may act as a molecular link between HspB, Hsp70, and the ubiquitin ligases. However, here we show that HspB8 and Bag3 act in a non-canonical manner unrelated to the classical chaperone model. Rather, HspB8 and Bag3 induce the phosphorylation of the α-subunit of the translation initiator factor eIF2, which in turn causes a translational shut-down and stimulates autophagy. This function of HspB8·Bag3 does not require Hsp70 and also targets fully folded substrates. HspB8·Bag3 activity was independent of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress kinase PERK, demonstrating that its action is unrelated to ER stress and suggesting that it activates stress-mediated translational arrest and autophagy through a novel pathway.


Stem Cells | 2008

Keratinocyte Growth Factor Prevents Radiation Damage to Salivary Glands by Expansion of the Stem/Progenitor Pool

Isabelle M.A. Lombaert; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Pieter K. Wierenga; Harm H. Kampinga; Gerald de Haan; Robert P. Coppes

Irradiation of salivary glands during radiotherapy treatment of patients with head and neck cancer evokes persistent hyposalivation. This results from depletion of stem cells, which renders the gland incapable of replenishing saliva to produce acinar cells. The aim of this study was to investigate whether it is possible to expand the salivary gland stem/progenitor cell population, thereby preventing acinar cell depletion and subsequent gland dysfunction after irradiation. To induce cell proliferation, keratinocyte growth factor (ΔN23‐KGF, palifermin) was administered to C57BL/6 mice for 4 days before and/or after local irradiation of salivary glands. Salivary gland vitality was quantified by in vivo saliva flow rates, morphological measurements, and a newly developed in vitro salisphere progenitor/stem cell assay. Irradiation of salivary glands led to a pronounced reduction in the stem cells of the tissues, resulting in severe hyposalivation and a reduced number of acinar cells. ΔN23‐KGF treatment for 4 days before irradiation indeed induced salivary gland stem/progenitor cell proliferation, increasing the stem and progenitor cell pool. This did not change the relative radiation sensitivity of the stem/progenitor cells, but, as a consequence, an absolute higher number of stem/progenitor cells and acinar cells survived after radiation. Postirradiation treatment with ΔN23‐KGF also improved gland function, and this effect was much more pronounced in ΔN23‐KGF pretreated animals. Post‐treatment with ΔN23‐KGF seemed to act through accelerated expansion of the pool of progenitor/stem cells that survived the irradiation treatment. Overall, our data indicate that ΔN23‐KGF is a promising drug to enhance the number of salivary gland progenitor/stem cells and consequently prevent radiation‐induced hyposalivation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Dynamic changes in the localization of thermally unfolded nuclear proteins associated with chaperone-dependent protection

Ellen A. A. Nollen; Florian A. Salomons; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Johannes J. L. van der Want; Ody C. M. Sibon; Harm H. Kampinga

Molecular chaperones are involved in the protection of cells against protein damage through their ability to hold, disaggregate, and refold damaged proteins or their ability to facilitate degradation of damaged proteins. Little is known about how these processes are spatially coordinated in cells. Using a heat-sensitive nuclear model protein luciferase fused to the traceable, heat-stable enhanced green fluorescent protein (N-luc-EGFP), we now show that heat inactivation and insolubilization of luciferase were associated with accumulation of N-luc-EGFP at multiple foci throughout the nucleus. Coexpression of Hsp70, one of the major mammalian chaperones, reduced the formation of these small foci during heat shock. Instead, the heat-unfolded N-luc-EGFP accumulated in large, insoluble foci. Immunofluorescence analysis revealed that these foci colocalized with the nucleoli. Time-lapse analysis demonstrated that protein translocation to the nucleolus, in contrast to the accumulation at small foci, was fully reversible upon return to the normal growth temperature. This reversibility was associated with an increase in the level of active and soluble luciferase. Expression of a carboxyl-terminal deletion mutant of Hsp70(1–543), which lacked chaperone activity, had no effect on the localization of N-luc-EGFP, which suggests that the Hsp70 chaperone activity is required for the translocation events. Our data show that Hsp70 not only is involved in holding and refolding of heat-unfolded nuclear proteins but also drives them to the nucleolus during stress. This might prevent random aggregation of thermolabile proteins within the nucleus, thereby allowing their refolding at the permissive conditions and preventing indirect damage to other nuclear components.


Radiotherapy and Oncology | 2013

Salisphere derived c-Kit+ cell transplantation restores tissue homeostasis in irradiated salivary gland

Lalitha S.Y. Nanduri; Isabelle M.A. Lombaert; Marianne van der Zwaag; Hette Faber; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Ronald van Os; Robert P. Coppes

INTRODUCTION During radiotherapy salivary glands of head and neck cancer patients are unavoidably co-irradiated, potentially resulting in life-long impairment. Recently we showed that transplantation of salisphere-derived c-Kit expressing cells can functionally regenerate irradiated salivary glands. This study aims to select a more potent subpopulation of c-Kit(+) cells, co-expressing stem cell markers and to investigate whether long-term tissue homeostasis is restored after stem cell transplantation. METHODS AND RESULTS Salisphere derived c-Kit(+) cells that co-expressed CD24 and/or CD49f markers, were intra-glandularly injected into 15 Gy irradiated submandibular glands of mice. Particularly, c-Kit(+)/CD24(+)/CD49f(+) cell transplanted mice improved saliva production (54.59 ± 11.1%) versus the irradiated control group (21.5 ± 8.7%). Increase in expression of cells with differentiated duct cell markers like, cytokeratins (CK8, 18, 7 and 14) indicated functional recovery of this compartment. Moreover, ductal stem cell marker expression like c-Kit, CD133, CD24 and CD49f reappeared after transplantation indicating long-term functional maintenance potential of the gland. Furthermore, a normalization of vascularization as indicated by CD31 expression and reduction of fibrosis was observed, indicative of normalization of the microenvironment. CONCLUSIONS Our results show that stem cell transplantation not only rescues hypo-salivation, but also restores tissue homeostasis of the irradiated gland, necessary for long-term maintenance of adult tissue.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Cytokine Treatment Improves Parenchymal and Vascular Damage of Salivary Glands after Irradiation

Isabelle M.A. Lombaert; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Pieter K. Wierenga; Harm H. Kampinga; Gerald de Haan; Robert P. Coppes

Purpose: During radiotherapy for head and neck cancer, co-irradiation (IR) of salivary glands results in acute and often lifelong hyposalivation. Recently, we showed that bone marrow-derived cells (BMC) can partially facilitate postradiation regeneration of the mouse submandibular gland. In this study, we investigate whether optimized mobilization of BMCs can further facilitate regeneration of radiation-damaged salivary glands. Experimental Design: Salivary glands of mice reconstituted with eGFP+ bone marrow cells were irradiated with a single dose of 15 Gy. One month later, BMCs were mobilized using granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) or the combination of FMS-like tyrosine kinase-3 ligand, stem cell factor, and G-CSF (termed F/S/G) as mobilizing agents. Salivary gland function and morphology were evaluated at 90 days post-IR by measuring the saliva flow rate, the number of acinar cells, and the functionality of the vasculature. Results: Compared with G-CSF alone, the combined F/S/G treatment mobilized a 10-fold higher number and different types of BMCs to the bloodstream and increased the number of eGFP+ cells in the irradiated submandibular gland from 49% to 65%. Both treatments reduced radiation-induced hyposalivation from almost nothing in the untreated group to ∼20% of normal amount. Surprisingly, however, F/S/G treatment resulted in significant less damage to submandibular blood vessels and induced BMC-derived neovascularization. Conclusions: Post-IR F/S/G treatment facilitates regeneration of the submandibular gland and ameliorates vascular damage. The latter is partly due to BMCs differentiating in vascular cells but is likely to also result from direct stimulation of existing blood vessel cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Identification of the Drosophila ortholog of HSPB8: implication of HSPB8 loss of function in protein folding diseases.

Serena Carra; Alessandra Boncoraglio; Bart Kanon; Jeanette F. Brunsting; Melania Minoia; Anil Rana; Michel J. Vos; Kay Seidel; Ody C. M. Sibon; Harm H. Kampinga

Protein aggregation is a hallmark of many neuronal disorders, including the polyglutamine disorder spinocerebellar ataxia 3 and peripheral neuropathies associated with the K141E and K141N mutations in the small heat shock protein HSPB8. In cells, HSPB8 cooperates with BAG3 to stimulate autophagy in an eIF2α-dependent manner and facilitates the clearance of aggregate-prone proteins (Carra, S., Seguin, S. J., Lambert, H., and Landry, J. (2008) J. Biol. Chem. 283, 1437–1444; Carra, S., Brunsting, J. F., Lambert, H., Landry, J., and Kampinga, H. H. (2009) J. Biol. Chem. 284, 5523–5532). Here, we first identified Drosophila melanogaster HSP67Bc (Dm-HSP67Bc) as the closest functional ortholog of human HSPB8 and demonstrated that, like human HSPB8, Dm-HSP67Bc induces autophagy via the eIF2α pathway. In vitro, both Dm-HSP67Bc and human HSPB8 protected against mutated ataxin-3-mediated toxicity and decreased the aggregation of a mutated form of HSPB1 (P182L-HSPB1) associated with peripheral neuropathy. Up-regulation of both Dm-HSP67Bc and human HSPB8 protected and down-regulation of endogenous Dm-HSP67Bc significantly worsened SCA3-mediated eye degeneration in flies. The K141E and K141N mutated forms of human HSPB8 that are associated with peripheral neuropathy were significantly less efficient than wild-type HSPB8 in decreasing the aggregation of both mutated ataxin 3 and P182L-HSPB1. Our current data further support the link between the HSPB8-BAG3 complex, autophagy, and folding diseases and demonstrate that impairment or loss of function of HSPB8 might accelerate the progression and/or severity of folding diseases.

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Harm H. Kampinga

University Medical Center Groningen

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Awt Konings

University of Groningen

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Ody C. M. Sibon

University Medical Center Groningen

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Robert P. Coppes

University Medical Center Groningen

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Serena Carra

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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