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Featured researches published by Klaus Qvortrup.


Particle and Fibre Toxicology | 2011

Distribution of silver in rats following 28 days of repeated oral exposure to silver nanoparticles or silver acetate

Katrin Loeschner; Niels Hadrup; Klaus Qvortrup; Agnete Larsen; Xueyun Gao; Ulla Vogel; Alicja Mortensen; Henrik Rye Lam; Erik Huusfeldt Larsen

BackgroundThe study investigated the distribution of silver after 28 days repeated oral administration of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) and silver acetate (AgAc) to rats. Oral administration is a relevant route of exposure because of the use of silver nanoparticles in products related to food and food contact materials.ResultsAgNPs were synthesized with a size distribution of 14 ± 4 nm in diameter (90% of the nanoparticle volume) and stabilized in aqueous suspension by the polymer polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP). The AgNPs remained stable throughout the duration of the 28-day oral toxicity study in rats. The organ distribution pattern of silver following administration of AgNPs and AgAc was similar. However the absolute silver concentrations in tissues were lower following oral exposure to AgNPs. This was in agreement with an indication of a higher fecal excretion following administration of AgNPs. Besides the intestinal system, the largest silver concentrations were detected in the liver and kidneys. Silver was also found in the lungs and brain. Autometallographic (AMG) staining revealed a similar cellular localization of silver in ileum, liver, and kidney tissue in rats exposed to AgNPs or AgAc.Using transmission electron microscopy (TEM), nanosized granules were detected in the ileum of animals exposed to AgNPs or AgAc and were mainly located in the basal lamina of the ileal epithelium and in lysosomes of macrophages within the lamina propria. Using energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy it was shown that the granules in lysosomes consisted of silver, selenium, and sulfur for both AgNP and AgAc exposed rats. The diameter of the deposited granules was in the same size range as that of the administered AgNPs. No silver granules were detected by TEM in the liver.ConclusionsThe results of the present study demonstrate that the organ distribution of silver was similar when AgNPs or AgAc were administered orally to rats. The presence of silver granules containing selenium and sulfur in the intestinal wall of rats exposed to either of the silver forms suggests a common mechanism of their formation. Additional studies however, are needed to gain further insight into the underlying mechanisms of the granule formation, and to clarify whether AgNPs dissolve in the gastrointestinal system and/or become absorbed and translocate as intact nanoparticles to organs and tissues.


The Journal of Physiology | 2007

Myofibre damage in human skeletal muscle: effects of electrical stimulation versus voluntary contraction

Regina M. Crameri; Per Aagaard; Klaus Qvortrup; Henning Langberg; J Olesen; Michael Kjaer

Disruption to proteins within the myofibre after a single bout of unaccustomed eccentric exercise is hypothesized to induce delayed onset of muscle soreness and to be associated with an activation of satellite cells. This has been shown in animal models using electrical stimulation but not in humans using voluntary exercise. Untrained males (n= 8, range 22–27 years) performed 210 maximal eccentric contractions with each leg on an isokinetic dynamometer, voluntarily (VOL) with one leg and electrically induced (ES) with the other leg. Assessments from the skeletal muscle were obtained prior to exercise and at 5, 24, 96 and 192 h postexercise. Muscle tenderness rose in VOL and ES after 24 h, and did not differ between groups. Maximal isometric contraction strength, rate of force development and impulse declined in the VOL leg from 4 h after exercise, but not in ES (except at 24 h). In contrast, a significant disruption of cytoskeletal proteins (desmin) and a rise of myogenic growth factors (myogenin) occurred only in ES. Intracellular disruption and destroyed Z‐lines were markedly more pronounced in ES (40%) compared with VOL (10%). Likewise, the increase in satellite cell markers [neural cell adhesion molecule (N‐CAM) and paired‐box transcription factor (Pax‐7)] was more pronounced in ES versus VOL. Finally, staining of the intramuscular connective tissue (tenascin C) was increased equally in ES and VOL after exercise. The present study demonstrates that in human muscle, the delayed onset of muscle soreness was not significantly different between the two treatments despite marked differences in intramuscular histological markers, in particular myofibre proteins and satellite cell markers. An increase in tenascin C expression in the midbelly of the skeletal muscle in both legs provides further evidence of a potential role for the extracellular matrix in the phenomenon of delayed onset of muscle soreness.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Phenotypes of Non-Attached Pseudomonas aeruginosa Aggregates Resemble Surface Attached Biofilm

Morten Alhede; Kasper Nørskov Kragh; Klaus Qvortrup; Marie Allesen-Holm; Maria van Gennip; Louise Dahl Christensen; Peter Østrup Jensen; Anne K. Nielsen; Matt Parsek; Daniel J. Wozniak; Søren Molin; Tim Tolker-Nielsen; Niels Høiby; Michael Givskov; Thomas Bjarnsholt

For a chronic infection to be established, bacteria must be able to cope with hostile conditions such as low iron levels, oxidative stress, and clearance by the host defense, as well as antibiotic treatment. It is generally accepted that biofilm formation facilitates tolerance to these adverse conditions. However, microscopic investigations of samples isolated from sites of chronic infections seem to suggest that some bacteria do not need to be attached to surfaces in order to establish chronic infections. In this study we employed scanning electron microscopy, confocal laser scanning microscopy, RT-PCR as well as traditional culturing techniques to study the properties of Pseudomonas aeruginosa aggregates. We found that non-attached aggregates from stationary-phase cultures have comparable growth rates to surface attached biofilms. The growth rate estimations indicated that, independently of age, both aggregates and flow-cell biofilm had the same slow growth rate as a stationary phase shaking cultures. Internal structures of the aggregates matrix components and their capacity to survive otherwise lethal treatments with antibiotics (referred to as tolerance) and resistance to phagocytes were also found to be strikingly similar to flow-cell biofilms. Our data indicate that the tolerance of both biofilms and non-attached aggregates towards antibiotics is reversible by physical disruption. We provide evidence that the antibiotic tolerance is likely to be dependent on both the physiological states of the aggregates and particular matrix components. Bacterial surface-attachment and subsequent biofilm formation are considered hallmarks of the capacity of microbes to cause persistent infections. We have observed non-attached aggregates in the lungs of cystic fibrosis patients; otitis media; soft tissue fillers and non-healing wounds, and we propose that aggregated cells exhibit enhanced survival in the hostile host environment, compared with non-aggregated bacterial populations.


American Journal of Sports Medicine | 2010

Fibril Morphology and Tendon Mechanical Properties in Patellar Tendinopathy Effects of Heavy Slow Resistance Training

M. Kongsgaard; Klaus Qvortrup; Jytte Overgaard Larsen; Per Aagaard; Simon Doessing; Philip Hansen; Michael Kjaer; S. Peter Magnusson

Background Patellar tendinopathy is characterized by pathologic abnormalities. Heavy slow resistance training (HSR) is effective in the management of patellar tendinopathy, but the underlying functional mechanisms remain elusive. Purpose To investigate fibril morphology and mechanical properties in patellar tendinopathy and the effect of HSR on these properties. Study Design Cohort study; Level of evidence, 2. Methods Eight male patients with patellar tendinopathy completed 12 weeks of HSR. Nine healthy subjects served as controls. Assessments were conducted at baseline and at 12 weeks. Patients assessed symptoms/function and maximal tendon pain during activity. Tendon biopsy samples were analyzed for fibril density, volume fraction, and mean fibril area. Tendon mechanical properties were assessed using force and ultrasonography samplings. Results Patients improved in symptoms/function (P = .02) and maximal tendon pain during activity (P = .008). Stiffness and modulus of control and tendinopathy tendons were similar at baseline. Stiffness remained unaffected in control tendons (3487 ± 392 to 3157 ± 327 N/mm, P = .57) but declined in tendinopathic tendons at 12 weeks (3185 ± 187 to 2701 ± 201 N/mm, P = .04). At baseline, fibril volume fraction was equal, fibril density smaller (P = .03), and mean fibril area tended to be higher in tendinopathy versus controls (P = .07). Fibril morphology remained unchanged in controls but fibril density increased (70% ± 18%, P = .02) and fibril mean area decreased (—26% ± 21%, P = .04) in tendinopathic tendons after HSR. Conclusion Fibril morphology is abnormal in tendinopathy, but tendon mechanical properties are not. Clinical improvements after HSR were associated with changes in fibril morphology toward normal fibril density and mean fibril area. Heavy slow resistance training improved the clinical outcome of patellar tendinopathy, and these improvements were associated with normalization of fibril morphology, most likely due to a production of new fibrils.


Matrix Biology | 2002

Collagen fibril size and crimp morphology in ruptured and intact Achilles tendons

S. P. Magnusson; Klaus Qvortrup; Jytte Overgaard Larsen; S Rosager; P Hanson; Per Aagaard; Michael Krogsgaard; Michael Kjaer

The present study examined the hypothesis that collagen fibril diameter and crimp angle in ruptured human Achilles tendons differed from that of intact ones. Tissue samples were obtained from the central core (distal core) and the posterior periphery (distal superficial) at the rupture site, and the proximally intact (proximal superficial) part of the tendon in 10 subjects (38+/-8 years) with a complete tendon rupture. For comparisons corresponding tissue samples were procured from age (38+/-7 years) and gender matched intact Achilles tendons during routine forensic autopsy. The cross-sectional area density and diameter distribution of fibrils were analyzed using stereological techniques of digitized electron microscopy biopsy cross-sections, while crimp angle was measured by the changing banding pattern of collagen fibers when rotated between crossed polars. Nine of 10 persons with tendon ruptures reported that the injury did not occur during exceedingly large forces, and none experienced any symptoms in the days or months prior to the injury. Fibril diameter distribution showed no region-specific differences in either the ruptured or intact tendons for either group. However, in the distal core there were fewer fibrils in the ruptured compared to the intact tendons in 60-150 nm range, P<0.01. Similarly, in the distal superficial portion there were fewer fibrils in the ruptured compared to the intact tendons in the 90-120 nm range, 2P<0.05, while there were no differences in the proximal superficial tendons. Crimp angle did not display any region-specific differences, or any difference between the rupture and intact tendons. In conclusion, these data suggest that although crimp morphology is unchanged there appears to be a site-specific loss of larger fibrils in the core and periphery of the Achilles tendon rupture site. Moreover, the lack of symptoms prior to the rupture suggests that clinical tendinopathy is not an etiological factor in complete tendon ruptures.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Immature truncated O-glycophenotype of cancer directly induces oncogenic features

Prakash Radhakrishnan; Sally Dabelsteen; Frey Brus Madsen; Chiara Francavilla; Katharina L. Kopp; Catharina Steentoft; Sergey Y. Vakhrushev; J. Olsen; Lars Kai Hansen; Eric P. Bennett; Anders Woetmann; Guangliang Yin; Longyun Chen; Haiyan Song; Mads Bak; Ryan A. Hlady; Staci L. Peters; Rene Opavsky; Christenze Thode; Klaus Qvortrup; Katrine T. Schjoldager; Henrik Clausen; Michael A. Hollingsworth; Hans H. Wandall

Significance Cancer cells characteristically express proteins with immature O-glycosylation, but how and why cancer cells express immature O-glycans has remained poorly understood. Here, we report that one prevalent mechanism in pancreatic cancer is epigenetic silencing, rather than somatic mutations in a key chaperone, core 1 β3-Gal-T-specific molecular chaperone (COSMC), required for mature elongated O-glycosylation. We also demonstrate, with the use of well-defined cell systems generated by precise gene editing, that the aberrant O-glycophenotype by itself induces oncogenic features with enhanced growth and invasion. Our study suggests that the characteristic aberrant O-glycophenotype is critical for the development and behavior of cancer and further provides support for immunotherapeutic strategies that target aberrant O-glycans. Aberrant expression of immature truncated O-glycans is a characteristic feature observed on virtually all epithelial cancer cells, and a very high frequency is observed in early epithelial premalignant lesions that precede the development of adenocarcinomas. Expression of the truncated O-glycan structures Tn and sialyl-Tn is strongly associated with poor prognosis and overall low survival. The genetic and biosynthetic mechanisms leading to accumulation of truncated O-glycans are not fully understood and include mutation or dysregulation of glycosyltransferases involved in elongation of O-glycans, as well as relocation of glycosyltransferases controlling initiation of O-glycosylation from Golgi to endoplasmic reticulum. Truncated O-glycans have been proposed to play functional roles for cancer-cell invasiveness, but our understanding of the biological functions of aberrant glycosylation in cancer is still highly limited. Here, we used exome sequencing of most glycosyltransferases in a large series of primary and metastatic pancreatic cancers to rule out somatic mutations as a cause of expression of truncated O-glycans. Instead, we found hypermethylation of core 1 β3-Gal-T-specific molecular chaperone, a key chaperone for O-glycan elongation, as the most prevalent cause. We next used gene editing to produce isogenic cell systems with and without homogenous truncated O-glycans that enabled, to our knowledge, the first polyomic and side-by-side evaluation of the cancer O-glycophenotype in an organotypic tissue model and in xenografts. The results strongly suggest that truncation of O-glycans directly induces oncogenic features of cell growth and invasion. The study provides support for targeting cancer-specific truncated O-glycans with immunotherapeutic measures.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2009

Effect of estrogen on tendon collagen synthesis, tendon structural characteristics, and biomechanical properties in postmenopausal women

Mette Hansen; M. Kongsgaard; Lars Holm; Dorthe Skovgaard; S. Peter Magnusson; Klaus Qvortrup; Jytte Overgaard Larsen; Per Aagaard; Morten Dahl; Annette Karen Serup; Jan Frystyk; Allan Flyvbjerg; Henning Langberg; Michael Kjaer

The knowledge about the effect of estradiol on tendon connective tissue is limited. Therefore, we studied the influence of estradiol on tendon synthesis, structure, and biomechanical properties in postmenopausal women. Nonusers (control, n = 10) or habitual users of oral estradiol replacement therapy (ERT, n = 10) were studied at rest and in response to one-legged resistance exercise. Synthesis of tendon collagen was determined by stable isotope incorporation [fractional synthesis rate (FSR)] and microdialysis technique (NH(2)-terminal propeptide of type I collagen synthesis). Tendon area and fibril characteristics were determined by MRI and transmission electron microscopy, whereas tendon biomechanical properties were measured during isometric maximal voluntary contraction by ultrasound recording. Tendon FSR was markedly higher in ERT users (P < 0.001), whereas no group difference was seen in tendon NH(2)-terminal propeptide of type I collagen synthesis (P = 0.32). In ERT users, positive correlations between serum estradiol (s-estradiol) and tendon synthesis were observed, whereas change in tendon synthesis from rest to exercise was negatively correlated to s-estradiol. Tendon area, fibril density, fibril volume fraction, and fibril mean area did not differ between groups. However, the percentage of medium-sized fibrils was higher in ERT users (P < 0.05), whereas the percentage of large fibrils tended to be greater in control (P = 0.10). A lower Youngs modulus (GPa/%) was found in ERT users (P < 0.05). In conclusion, estradiol administration was associated with higher tendon FSR and a higher relative number of smaller fibrils. Whereas this indicates stimulated collagen turnover in the resting state, collagen responses to exercise were negatively associated with s-estradiol. These results indicate a pivotal role for estradiol in maintaining homeostasis of female connective tissue.


The FASEB Journal | 2011

Sequenced response of extracellular matrix deadhesion and fibrotic regulators after muscle damage is involved in protection against future injury in human skeletal muscle

Abigail L. Mackey; Simon Brandstetter; Peter Schjerling; Jens Bojsen-Møller; Klaus Qvortrup; Mette M Pedersen; Simon Doessing; Michael Kjaer; S. Peter Magnusson; Henning Langberg

The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that remodeling of skeletal muscle extracellular matrix (ECM) is involved in protecting human muscle against injury. Biopsies were obtained from medial gastrocnemius muscles after a single bout of electrical stimulation (B) or a repeated bout (RB) 30 d later, or 30 d after a single stimulation bout (RBc). A muscle biopsy was collected from the control leg for comparison with the stimulated leg. Satellite cell content, tenascin C, and muscle regeneration were assessed by immunohistochemistry; real‐time PCR was used to measure mRNA levels of collagens, laminins, heat‐shock proteins (HSPs), inflammation, and related growth factors. The large responses of HSPs, CCL2, and tenascin C detected 48 h after a single bout were attenuated in the RB trial, indicative of protection against injury. Satellite cell content and 12 target genes, including IGF‐1, were elevated 30 d after a single bout. Among those displaying the greatest difference vs. control muscle, ECM laminin‐β1 and collagen types I and III were elevated ~6‐ to 9‐fold (P<0.001). The findings indicate that the sequenced events of load‐induced early deadhesion and later strengthening of skeletal muscle ECM play a role in protecting human muscle against future injury.—Mackey, A. L., Brandstetter, S., Schjerling, P., Bojsen‐Moller, J., Qvortrup, K., Pedersen, M. M., Doessing, S. Kjaer, M., Magnus‐son, S. P., Langberg, H. Sequenced response of extracellular matrix deadhesion and fibrotic regulators after muscle damage is involved in protection against future injury in human skeletal muscle. FASEB J. 25, 1943‐1959 (2011). www.fasebj.org


Cells Tissues Organs | 2002

Sieve Plugs in Fenestrae of Glomerular Capillaries – Site of the Filtration Barrier?

J. Rostgaard; Klaus Qvortrup

The exact location of the filtration barrier of the glomerular capillary wall, which consists of an endothelium, a basement membrane and a visceral epithelium, has not yet been determined. Apparent discrepancies between different investigators in the past could be explained if postmortem artifactual tissue changes, due to subnormal blood pressure or anoxia, have taken place in the endothelium before the tissue and tracers have been sufficiently fixed and immobilized by the fixative. To test this supposition, a new method of fixation, which includes a technique to maintain a physiological perfusion pressure and a fixative composed of an oxygen-carrying blood substitute fluid containing glutaraldehyde, was employed combined with contrast enhancement. New observations of the glomerular capillary wall revealed that filamentous plugs (about 90 nm in height) filled the capillary fenestrae and a filamentous surface coat about 60 nm thick covered the interfenestral domains of the endothelial cell. Based on these purely morphological data, we dare to suggest that the fenestral plugs are the primary site of the glomerular filtration barrier – albeit highly speculative, nevertheless a logical location – and consequently that the glomerular filtration process is a ‘tangential-flow’ as opposed to a ‘dead-end’ filtration process. A tangential-flow filtration would minimize ‘clogging’ and ‘concentration polarization’ in the ‘filter’.


Gastroenterology | 1993

Ultrastructure of interstitial cells of Cajal in circular muscle of human small intestine

Jüri Johannes Rumessen; Hanne B. Mikkelsen; Klaus Qvortrup; Lars Thuneberg

BACKGROUND Interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) may be important regulatory cells in gut muscle layers. This study examined ICC within the circular muscle of human small intestine. METHODS Surgically resected, uninvolved intestine was studied by light microscopy and electron microscopy. RESULTS Muscle lamellae were separated by main septa in continuity with submucosa. Smooth muscle cells ran radially in the septa. Two types of ICC were distinguished. One ICC type had abundant intermediate filaments and smooth cisternae and a discontinuous basal lamina. This ICC type was present in the septa and in the outer third of the circular lamellae. The other ICC type had a complete basal lamina and conspicuous caveolae. This ICC type was observed only in the inner third of the circular lamellae. Both ICC types were close to nerves, but only the latter type formed gap junctions with one another and with muscle cells. Junctions between the two ICC types were not observed. CONCLUSIONS The arrangement suggests that ICC and radially oriented muscle cells participate in electrical and mechanical coordination of the circular muscle layer of human small intestine.

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Michael Kjaer

University of Copenhagen

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J. Rostgaard

University of Copenhagen

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Carsten Købler

Technical University of Denmark

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Kristian Mølhave

Technical University of Denmark

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Morten Friis

University of Copenhagen

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Per Aagaard

University of Southern Denmark

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Ulla Vogel

Technical University of Denmark

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