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Dive into the research topics where Katharina D'Herde is active.

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Featured researches published by Katharina D'Herde.


Apoptosis | 2006

Clearance of apoptotic and necrotic cells and its immunological consequences.

Dmitri V. Krysko; Katharina D'Herde; Peter Vandenabeele

The ultimate and most favorable fate of almost all dying cells is engulfment by neighboring or specialized cells. Efficient clearance of cells undergoing apoptotic death is crucial for normal tissue homeostasis and for the modulation of immune responses. Engulfment of apoptotic cells is finely regulated by a highly redundant system of receptors and bridging molecules on phagocytic cells that detect molecules specific for dying cells. Recognition of necrotic cells by phagocytes is less well understood than recognition of apoptotic cells, but an increasing number of recent studies, which are discussed here, are highlighting its importance. New observations indicate that the interaction of macrophages with dying cells initiates internalization of the apoptotic or necrotic targets, and that internalization can be preceded by “zipper”-like and macropinocytotic mechanisms, respectively. We emphasize that clearance of dying cells is an important fundamental process serving multiple functions in the regulation of normal tissue turnover and homeostasis, and is not just simple anti- or pro-inflammatory responses. Here we review recent findings on genetic pathways participating in apoptotic cell clearance, mechanisms of internalization, and molecules involved in engulfment of apoptotic versus necrotic cells, as well as their immunological consequences and relationships to disease pathogenesis.


Nature Cell Biology | 2007

Caspase-14 protects against epidermal UVB photodamage and water loss.

Geertrui Denecker; Esther Hoste; Barbara Gilbert; Tino Hochepied; Petra Ovaere; Saskia Lippens; Caroline Van den Broecke; Petra Van Damme; Katharina D'Herde; Jean Pierre Hachem; Gaetan Borgonie; Richard B. Presland; Luc Schoonjans; Claude Libert; Joël Vandekerckhove; Kris Gevaert; Peter Vandenabeele; Wim Declercq

Caspase-14 belongs to a conserved family of aspartate-specific proteinases. Its expression is restricted almost exclusively to the suprabasal layers of the epidermis and the hair follicles. Moreover, the proteolytic activation of caspase-14 is associated with stratum corneum formation, implicating caspase-14 in terminal keratinocyte differentiation and cornification. Here, we show that the skin of caspase-14-deficient mice was shiny and lichenified, indicating an altered stratum-corneum composition. Caspase-14-deficient epidermis contained significantly more alveolar keratohyalin F-granules, the profilaggrin stores. Accordingly, caspase-14-deficient epidermis is characterized by an altered profilaggrin processing pattern and we show that recombinant caspase-14 can directly cleave profilaggrin in vitro. Caspase-14-deficient epidermis is characterized by reduced skin-hydration levels and increased water loss. In view of the important role of filaggrin in the structure and moisturization of the skin, the knockout phenotype could be explained by an aberrant processing of filaggrin. Importantly, the skin of caspase-14-deficient mice was highly sensitive to the formation of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers after UVB irradiation, leading to increased levels of UVB-induced apoptosis. Removal of the stratum corneum indicate that caspase-14 controls the UVB scavenging capacity of the stratum corneum.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2009

Connexin-related signaling in cell death: to live or let die?

Elke Decrock; Mathieu Vinken; E De Vuyst; Dmitri V. Krysko; Katharina D'Herde; Tamara Vanhaecke; Peter Vandenabeele; Vera Rogiers; Luc Leybaert

Evidence is accumulating that some forms of cell death, like apoptosis, are not only governed by the complex interplay between extracellular and intracellular signals but are also strongly influenced by intercellular communicative networks. The latter is provided by arrays of channels consisting of connexin proteins, with gap junctions directly connecting the cytoplasm of neighboring cells and hemichannels positioned as pores that link the cytoplasm to the extracellular environment. The role of gap junctions in cell death communication has received considerable interest and recently hemichannels have joined in as potentially toxic pores adding their part to the cell death process. However, despite a large body of existing evidence, especially for gap junctions, the exact contribution of the connexin channel family still remains controversial, as both gap junctions and hemichannels may furnish cell death as well as cell survival signals. An additional layer of complexity is formed by the fact that connexin proteins as such, beyond their channel function, may influence the cell death process. We here review the current knowledge on connexins and their channels in cell death and specifically address the molecular mechanisms that underlie connexin-related signaling. We also briefly focus on pannexins, a novel set of connexin-like proteins that have been implicated in cellular responses to pathological insults.


Apoptosis | 2005

Gap junctions and the propagation of cell survival and cell death signals

Dmitri V. Krysko; Luc Leybaert; Peter Vandenabeele; Katharina D'Herde

Gap junctions are a unique type of intercellular channels that connect the cytoplasm of adjoining cells. Each gap junction channel is comprised of two hemichannels or connexons and each connexon is formed by the aggregation of six protein subunits known as connexins. Gap junction channels allow the intercellular passage of small (< 1.5 kDa) molecules and regulate essential processes during development and differentiation. However, their role in cell survival and cell death is poorly understood. We review experimental data that support the hypothesis that gap junction channels may propagate cell death and survival modulating signals. In addition, we explore the hypothesis that hemichannels (or unapposed connexons) might be used as a paracrine conduit to spread factors that modulate the fate of the surrounding cells. Finally, direct signal transduction activity of connexins in cell death and survival pathways is addressed.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2009

Connexin 43 hemichannels contribute to the propagation of apoptotic cell death in a rat C6 glioma cell model

Elke Decrock; E De Vuyst; Mathieu Vinken; M. Van Moorhem; Katleen Vranckx; Nan Wang; L. Van Laeken; M. De Bock; Katharina D'Herde; Charles P. Lai; Vera Rogiers; William Howard Evans; Christian C. Naus; Luc Leybaert

Gap junctions (GJs) have been demonstrated to communicate cell death signals from apoptotic to healthy cells, thereby spatially extending apoptosis. Before being incorporated into GJs, hemichannels (hemi-GJs) are normally closed but recent evidence suggests that they can be opened by various messengers and conditions, thereby forming a pore through which molecules can enter or leave the cell potentially leading to cell death. The aim of this study was to determine the contribution of GJs and hemichannels in the communication of apoptosis toward surrounding cells. We induced apoptosis in C6 glioma cells stably transfected with connexin (Cx)43, with cytochrome C (cytC) using in situ electroporation and found that healthy surrounding cells underwent apoptotic transformation. Work with various cell death markers, wild-type (WT) and Cx43-expressing cells, inhibitors of GJs and/or hemichannels, and Cx43 gene silencing showed that GJs contribute to the spread of apoptosis in a zone next to where apoptosis was triggered whereas hemichannels also promoted cell death beyond this area. Buffering cytoplasmic Ca2+ changes inhibited the spread of apoptosis in both cases. We conclude that Cx43 hemichannels, in concert with their GJ counterparts, play a role in communicating cytC-induced apoptotic cell death messages.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2006

Macrophages use different internalization mechanisms to clear apoptotic and necrotic cells

Dmitri V. Krysko; Geertrui Denecker; Nele Festjens; Sofie Gabriels; Eef Parthoens; Katharina D'Herde; Peter Vandenabeele

The present study characterized two different internalization mechanisms used by macrophages to engulf apoptotic and necrotic cells. Our in vitro phagocytosis assay used a mouse macrophage cell line, and murine L929sAhFas cells that are induced to die in a necrotic way by TNFR1 and heat shock or in an apoptotic way by Fas stimulation. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) revealed that apoptotic bodies were taken up by macrophages with formation of tight fitting phagosomes, similar to the ‘zipper’-like mechanism of phagocytosis, whereas necrotic cells were internalized by a macropinocytotic mechanism involving formation of multiple ruffles directed towards necrotic debris. Two macropinocytosis markers (Lucifer Yellow (LY) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP)) were excluded from the phagosomes containing apoptotic bodies, but they were present inside the macropinosomes containing necrotic material. Wortmannin (phosphatidylinositol 3′-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor) reduced the uptake of apoptotic cells, but the engulfment of necrotic cells remained unaffected. Our data demonstrate that apoptotic and necrotic cells are internalized differently by macrophages.


Methods in Enzymology | 2008

Methods for Distinguishing Apoptotic from Necrotic Cells and Measuring Their Clearance

Dmitri V. Krysko; Tom Vanden Berghe; Eef Parthoens; Katharina D'Herde; Peter Vandenabeele

Three major morphological types of cell death can be distinguished: type I (apoptotic cell death), type II (autophagic cell death), and type III (necrotic cell death). Details of the pathways of apoptotic and autophagic cell death have been described, and distinct biochemical markers have been identified. However, no distinct surface or biochemical markers of necrotic cell death have been identified yet, and only negative markers are available. These include absence of apoptotic parameters (caspase activation, cytochrome c release, and oligonucleosomal DNA fragmentation) and differential kinetics of cell death markers (phosphatidylserine exposure and cell membrane permeabilization). Moreover, a confounding factor is that apoptotic cells in the absence of phagocytosis proceed to secondary necrosis, which has many morphological features of primary necrotic cells. Secondary necrotic cells have already gone through an apoptotic stage, and so it is generally advisable in cell death research to perform time kinetics of cell death parameters. This chapter concentrates on methods that can distinguish apoptosis from necrosis on three different levels (morphological, biochemical, and analysis of cell-cell interactions) and emphasizes that only a combination of several techniques can correctly characterize cell death type. First, we describe analysis of apoptotic versus necrotic morphology by time-lapse microscopy, flow fluorocytometry, and transmission electron microscopy. We also discuss various biochemical techniques for analysis of cell surface markers (phosphatidylserine exposure versus cell permeability by flow fluorocytometry), cellular markers such as DNA fragmentation (flow fluorocytometry), caspase activation, Bid cleavage, and cytochrome c release (Western blotting). Next, we describe how primary and secondary necrotic cells can be distinguished by analysis of supernatant for caspases, HMGB1, and release of cytokeratin 18. Finally, we discuss cell-cell interactions during cell death and describe a quantitative method for examining dead cell clearance by flow fluorocytometry. A selection of techniques that can be used to study internalization mechanisms used by phagocytes to engulf dying cells is also presented, such as scanning and transmission electron microscopy and fluorescence microscopy.


Apoptosis | 2008

Life and death of female gametes during oogenesis and folliculogenesis

Dmitri V. Krysko; Araceli Diez-Fraile; Godelieve Criel; Andrei A. Svistunov; Peter Vandenabeele; Katharina D'Herde

The vertebrate ovary is an extremely dynamic organ in which excessive or defective follicles are rapidly and effectively eliminated early in ontogeny and thereafter continuously throughout reproductive life. More than 99% of follicles disappear, primarily due to apoptosis of granulosa cells, and only a minute fraction of the surviving follicles successfully complete the path to ovulation. The balance between signals for cell death and survival determines the destiny of the follicles. An abnormally high rate of cell death followed by atresia can negatively affect fertility and eventually lead irreversibly to premature ovarian failure. In this review we provide a short overview of the role of programmed cell death in prenatal differentiation of the primordial germ cells and in postnatal folliculogenesis. We also discuss the issue of neo-oogenesis. Next, we highlight molecules involved in regulation of granulosa cell apoptosis. We further discuss the potential use of scores for apoptosis in granulosa cells and characteristics of follicular fluid as prognostic markers for predicting the outcome of assisted reproduction. Potential therapeutic strategies for combating premature ovarian failure are also addressed.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2004

Gap junctional communication and connexin43 expression in relation to apoptotic cell death and survival of granulosa cells

Dmitri V. Krysko; Sylvie Mussche; Luc Leybaert; Katharina D'Herde

Ovarian follicular atresia in all vertebrates is mediated via apoptosis that is initiated in the granulosa cell layer. Here we investigated the relation between connexin expression, cell coupling, and apoptosis in avian granulosa cells. Results from qualitative and quantitative immunocytochemical analysis and Western blotting of connexin43 (Cx43) and electron microscopic observations of gap junctions were compared with functional data on gap junctional coupling obtained by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching in four experimental groups: a control group of freshly isolated granulosa cells, 24-hr serum-free cultures as the apoptosis-inducing condition, and two other groups in which apoptosis was inhibited by either hormone substitution or exposure to elevated extracellular calcium. Our work shows that apoptosis induction in granulosa cells is accompanied by an increased level of cell coupling and that decreasing cell coupling with the gap junction blocker α-glycyrrhetinic acid dose-dependently inhibits apoptosis. The level of Cx43 expression was inversely related to the apoptotic index, suggesting that Cx43 expression plays a role in granulosa cell survival. Our study supports the hypothesis that gap junctional coupling plays a role in propagating a cell death message and suggests a role for Cx43 expression per se in granulosa cell survival.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Helicobacter suis causes severe gastric pathology in mouse and mongolian gerbil models of human gastric disease.

Bram Flahou; Freddy Haesebrouck; Frank Pasmans; Katharina D'Herde; A. Driessen; Kim Van Deun; Annemieke Smet; Luc Duchateau; Koen Chiers; Richard Ducatelle

Background “Helicobacter (H.) heilmannii” type 1 is the most prevalent gastric non-H. pylori Helicobacter species in humans suffering from gastric disease. It has been shown to be identical to H. suis, a bacterium which is mainly associated with pigs. To obtain better insights into the long-term pathogenesis of infections with this micro-organism, experimental infections were carried out in different rodent models. Methodology/Principal Findings Mongolian gerbils and mice of two strains (BALB/c and C57BL/6) were infected with H. suis and sacrificed at 3 weeks, 9 weeks and 8 months after infection. Gastric tissue samples were collected for PCR analysis, histological and ultrastructural examination. In gerbils, bacteria mainly colonized the antrum and a narrow zone in the fundus near the forestomach/stomach transition zone. In both mice strains, bacteria colonized the entire glandular stomach. Colonization with H. suis was associated with necrosis of parietal cells in all three animal strains. From 9 weeks after infection onwards, an increased proliferation rate of mucosal epithelial cells was detected in the stomach regions colonized with H. suis. Most gerbils showed a marked lymphocytic infiltration in the antrum and in the forestomach/stomach transition zone, becoming more pronounced in the course of time. At 8 months post infection, severe destruction of the normal antral architecture at the inflamed sites and development of mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma-like lesions were observed in some gerbils. In mice, the inflammatory response was less pronounced than in gerbils, consisting mainly of mononuclear cell infiltration and being most severe in the fundus. Conclusions/Significance H. suis causes death of parietal cells, epithelial cell hyperproliferation and severe inflammation in mice and Mongolian gerbil models of human gastric disease. Moreover, MALT lymphoma-like lesions were induced in H. suis-infected Mongolian gerbils. Therefore, the possible involvement of this micro-organism in human gastric disease should not be neglected.

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Piet Pattyn

Ghent University Hospital

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Wouter Willaert

Ghent University Hospital

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