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Dive into the research topics where Jeroen de Vrij is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeroen de Vrij.


Gene Therapy | 2007

Efficient incorporation of a functional hyper-stable single-chain antibody fragment protein-IX fusion in the adenovirus capsid

Jort Vellinga; Jeroen de Vrij; Susanna Myhre; Taco G. Uil; Pierre Martineau; Leif Lindholm; Rob C. Hoeben

Recombinant adenoviruses are frequently used as gene transfer vehicles for therapeutic gene delivery. Strategies to amend their tropism include the incorporation of polypeptides with high affinity for cellular receptors. Single-chain antibodies have a great potential to achieve such cell type specificity. In this study, we evaluated the efficiency of incorporation of a single-chain antibody fused with the adenovirus minor capsid protein IX in the capsid of adenovirus type 5 vectors. To this end, the codons for the single-chain antibody fragments (scFv) 13R4 were fused with those encoding of pIX via a 75-Angstrom spacer sequence. The 13R4 is a hyper-stable single-chain antibody directed against β-galactosidase, which was selected for its capacity to fold correctly in a reducing environment such as the cytoplasm. A lentiviral vector was used to stably express the pIX.flag.75.13R4.MYC.HIS fusion gene in 911 helper cells. Upon propagation of pIX-gene deleted human adenovirus-5 vectors on these cells, the pIX-fusion protein was efficiently incorporated in the capsid. Here, the 13R4 scFv was functional as was evident from its capacity to bind its ligand β-galactosidase. These data demonstrate that the minor capsid protein IX can be used as an anchor for incorporation of single-chain antibodies in the capsids of adenovirus vectors.


Journal of Gene Medicine | 2006

A system for efficient generation of adenovirus protein IX-producing helper cell lines

Jort Vellinga; Taco G. Uil; Jeroen de Vrij; Martijn J. W. E. Rabelink; Leif Lindholm; Rob C. Hoeben

The adenovirus 14.3 kDa hexon‐associated protein IX (pIX) functions in the viral capsid as ‘cement’ and assembles the hexons in stable groups‐of‐nine (GONs). Although viruses lacking pIX do not form GONs, and are less heat‐stable than wild‐type (wt) viruses, they can be propagated with the same kinetics and yields as the wt viruses. To facilitate ‘pseudotyping’ of adenoviral vectors we have set up an efficient system for the generation of pIX‐producing helper cell lines.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2014

Quantification and size-profiling of extracellular vesicles using tunable resistive pulse sensing.

Sybren L. N. Maas; Jeroen de Vrij; Marike Broekman

Extracellular vesicles (EVs), including ‘microvesicles’ and ‘exosomes’, are highly abundant in bodily fluids. Recent years have witnessed a tremendous increase in interest in EVs. EVs have been shown to play important roles in various physiological and pathological processes, including coagulation, immune responses, and cancer. In addition, EVs have potential as therapeutic agents, for instance as drug delivery vehicles or as regenerative medicine. Because of their small size (50 to 1,000 nm) accurate quantification and size profiling of EVs is technically challenging. This protocol describes how tunable resistive pulse sensing (tRPS) technology, using the qNano system, can be used to determine the concentration and size of EVs. The method, which relies on the detection of EVs upon their transfer through a nano sized pore, is relatively fast, suffices the use of small sample volumes and does not require the purification and concentration of EVs. Next to the regular operation protocol an alternative approach is described using samples spiked with polystyrene beads of known size and concentration. This real-time calibration technique can be used to overcome technical hurdles encountered when measuring EVs directly in biological fluids.


Human Gene Therapy | 2010

Adenovirus-Derived Vectors for Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy

Jeroen de Vrij; Ralph A. Willemsen; Leif Lindholm; Rob C. Hoeben

Prostate cancer is a leading cause of death among men in Western countries. Whereas the survival rate approaches 100% for patients with localized cancer, the results of treatment in patients with metastasized prostate cancer at diagnosis are much less successful. The patients are usually presented with a variety of treatment options, but therapeutic interventions in prostate cancer are associated with frequent adverse side effects. Gene therapy and oncolytic virus therapy may constitute new strategies. Already a wide variety of preclinical studies has demonstrated the therapeutic potential of such approaches, with oncolytic prostate-specific adenoviruses as the most prominent vector. The state of the art and future prospects of gene therapy in prostate cancer are reviewed, with a focus on adenoviral vectors. We summarize advances in adenovirus technology for prostate cancer treatment and highlight areas where further developments are necessary.


Cancer Research | 2007

An Oncolytic Adenovirus Redirected with a Tumor-Specific T-Cell Receptor

Zsolt Sebestyén; Jeroen de Vrij; Maria K. Magnusson; Reno Debets; Ralph A. Willemsen

To improve safety and specificity of oncolytic adenoviruses, we introduced T-cell receptors (TCR) specific for a unique class of truly tumor-specific antigens into the adenoviral fiber protein. The adenoviral fiber knob responsible for attachment to the coxsackie-adenoviral receptor (CAR) on target cells was replaced by a single-chain TCR (scTCR) molecule with specificity for the melanoma-associated cancer-testis antigen MAGE-A1, presented by HLA-A1, and an extrinsic trimerization motif in a replicating Ad5 vector (Ad5.R1-scTCR). The production of the recombinant virus was initiated in a novel producer cell line that expressed an antibody-based hexon-specific receptor (293T-AdR) in the cell membrane. This new production system allowed CAR-independent and target antigen-independent propagation of Ad5.R1-scTCR. Infection with adenovirus bearing the scTCR-based fiber resulted in an efficient killing of target tumor cells. The infection was cell type specific because only HLA-A1(+)/MAGE-A1(+) melanoma cells were killed, and thus, this retargeting strategy provides a versatile tool for future clinical application.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Directed adenovirus evolution using engineered mutator viral polymerases

Taco G. Uil; Jort Vellinga; Jeroen de Vrij; Sanne K. van den Hengel; Martijn J. W. E. Rabelink; Steve J. Cramer; Julia J. M. Eekels; Yavuz Ariyurek; Michiel van Galen; Rob C. Hoeben

Adenoviruses (Ads) are the most frequently used viruses for oncolytic and gene therapy purposes. Most Ad-based vectors have been generated through rational design. Although this led to significant vector improvements, it is often hampered by an insufficient understanding of Ad’s intricate functions and interactions. Here, to evade this issue, we adopted a novel, mutator Ad polymerase-based, ‘accelerated-evolution’ approach that can serve as general method to generate or optimize adenoviral vectors. First, we site specifically substituted Ad polymerase residues located in either the nucleotide binding pocket or the exonuclease domain. This yielded several polymerase mutants that, while fully supportive of viral replication, increased Ad’s intrinsic mutation rate. Mutator activities of these mutants were revealed by performing deep sequencing on pools of replicated viruses. The strongest identified mutators carried replacements of residues implicated in ssDNA binding at the exonuclease active site. Next, we exploited these mutators to generate the genetic diversity required for directed Ad evolution. Using this new forward genetics approach, we isolated viral mutants with improved cytolytic activity. These mutants revealed a common mutation in a splice acceptor site preceding the gene for the adenovirus death protein (ADP). Accordingly, the isolated viruses showed high and untimely expression of ADP, correlating with a severe deregulation of E3 transcript splicing.


Virology | 2011

Enhanced transduction of CAR-negative cells by protein IX-gene deleted adenovirus 5 vectors.

Jeroen de Vrij; Sanne K. van den Hengel; Taco G. Uil; Danijela Koppers-Lalic; Iris J. C. Dautzenberg; Oscar M.J.A. Stassen; Montserrat Bárcena; Masato Yamamoto; Corrina M.A. de Ridder; Robert Kraaij; Kitty M. C. Kwappenberg; Marco W. Schilham; Rob C. Hoeben

Abstract In human adenoviruses (HAdV), 240 copies of the 14.3-kDa minor capsid protein IX stabilize the capsid. Three N-terminal domains of protein IX form triskelions between hexon capsomers. The C-terminal domains of four protein IX monomers associate near the facet periphery. The precise biological role of protein IX remains enigmatic. Here we show that deletion of the protein IX gene from a HAdV-5 vector enhanced the reporter gene delivery 5 to 25-fold, specifically to Coxsackie and Adenovirus Receptor (CAR)-negative cell lines. Deletion of the protein IX gene also resulted in enhanced activation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The mechanism for the enhanced transduction is obscure. No differences in fiber loading, integrin-dependency of transduction, or factor-X binding could be established between protein IX-containing and protein IX-deficient particles. Our data suggest that protein IX can affect the cell tropism of HAdV-5, and may function to dampen the innate immune responses against HAdV particles.


Journal of Gene Medicine | 2009

A lentiviral vector-based adenovirus fiber-pseudotyping approach for expedited functional assessment of candidate retargeted fibers

Taco G. Uil; Jeroen de Vrij; Jort Vellinga; Martijn J. W. E. Rabelink; Steve J. Cramer; On Ying A. Chan; Margherita Pugnali; Maria K. Magnusson; Leif Lindholm; Pierre Boulanger; Rob C. Hoeben

Many studies aimed at retargeting adenovirus (Ad) rationally focus on genetic modification of fiber, which is the primary receptor‐binding protein of Ad. Retargeted fibers ultimately require functional validation in the viral context.


Viruses | 2014

Locally-Delivered T-Cell-Derived Cellular Vehicles Efficiently Track and Deliver Adenovirus Delta24-RGD to Infiltrating Glioma

Rutger K. Balvers; Zineb Belcaid; Sanne K. van den Hengel; Jenneke Kloezeman; Jeroen de Vrij; Hiroaki Wakimoto; Rob C. Hoeben; Reno Debets; Sieger Leenstra; Clemens Dirven; Martine Lamfers

Oncolytic adenoviral vectors are a promising alternative for the treatment of glioblastoma. Recent publications have demonstrated the advantages of shielding viral particles within cellular vehicles (CVs), which can be targeted towards the tumor microenvironment. Here, we studied T-cells, often having a natural capacity to target tumors, for their feasibility as a CV to deliver the oncolytic adenovirus, Delta24-RGD, to glioblastoma. The Jurkat T-cell line was assessed in co-culture with the glioblastoma stem cell (GSC) line, MGG8, for the optimal transfer conditions of Delta24-RGD in vitro. The effect of intraparenchymal and tail vein injections on intratumoral virus distribution and overall survival was addressed in an orthotopic glioma stem cell (GSC)-based xenograft model. Jurkat T-cells were demonstrated to facilitate the amplification and transfer of Delta24-RGD onto GSCs. Delta24-RGD dosing and incubation time were found to influence the migratory ability of T-cells towards GSCs. Injection of Delta24-RGD-loaded T-cells into the brains of GSC-bearing mice led to migration towards the tumor and dispersion of the virus within the tumor core and infiltrative zones. This occurred after injection into the ipsilateral hemisphere, as well as into the non-tumor-bearing hemisphere. We found that T-cell-mediated delivery of Delta24-RGD led to the inhibition of tumor growth compared to non-treated controls, resulting in prolonged survival (p = 0.007). Systemic administration of virus-loaded T-cells resulted in intratumoral viral delivery, albeit at low levels. Based on these findings, we conclude that T-cell-based CVs are a feasible approach to local Delta24-RGD delivery in glioblastoma, although efficient systemic targeting requires further improvement.


Virology Journal | 2011

Truncating the i-leader open reading frame enhances release of human adenovirus type 5 in glioma cells

Sanne K. van den Hengel; Jeroen de Vrij; Taco G. Uil; Martine Lamfers; Peter A. E. Sillevis Smitt; Rob C. Hoeben

BackgroundThe survival of glioma patients with the current treatments is poor. Early clinical trails with replicating adenoviruses demonstrated the feasibility and safety of the use of adenoviruses as oncolytic agents. Antitumor efficacy has been moderate due to inefficient virus replication and spread. Previous studies have shown that truncation of the adenovirus i-leader open reading frame enhanced cytopathic activity of HAdV-5 in several tumor cell lines. Here we report the effect of an i-leader mutation on the cytopathic activity in glioma cell lines and in primary high-grade glioma cell cultures.ResultsA mutation truncating the i-leader open reading frame was created in a molecular clone of replication-competent wild-type HAdV-5 by site-directed mutagenesis. We analyzed the cytopathic activity of this RL-07 mutant virus. A cell-viability assay showed increased cytopathic activity of the RL-07 mutant virus on U251 and SNB19 glioma cell lines. The plaque sizes of RL-07 on U251 monolayers were seven times larger than those of isogenic control viruses. Similarly, the cytopathic activity of the RL-07 viruses was strongly increased in six primary high-grade glioma cell cultures. In glioma cell lines the RL-07 virus was found to be released earlier into the culture medium. This was not due to enhanced viral protein synthesis, as was evident from equivalent E1A, Fiber and Adenovirus Death Protein amounts, nor to higher virus yields.ConclusionThe cytopathic activity of replicating adenovirus in glioblastoma cells is increased by truncating the i-leader open reading frame. Such mutations may help enhancing the antitumor cytopathic efficacy of oncolytic adenoviruses in the treatment of glioblastoma.

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Rob C. Hoeben

Leiden University Medical Center

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Taco G. Uil

Leiden University Medical Center

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Martine Lamfers

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Jort Vellinga

Leiden University Medical Center

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Sanne K. van den Hengel

Leiden University Medical Center

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Leif Lindholm

University of Gothenburg

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Reno Debets

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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