Kristel Brys
Ghent University
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Featured researches published by Kristel Brys.
Experimental Gerontology | 2002
Koen Houthoofd; Bart P. Braeckman; Isabelle Lenaerts; Kristel Brys; Annemie De Vreese; Sylvie Van Eygen; Jacques R. Vanfleteren
Culture in axenic medium causes two-fold increases in the length of development and adult life span in Caenorhabditis elegans. We asked whether axenic medium imposes dietary restriction (ADR), and causes changes in metabolic activity and stress resistance. Eat mutants, which have a reduced food intake, were studied in parallel with wild-type worms to assess potential synergistic actions of axenic culture and food restriction. We found that axenic culture enhances metabolic activity as assessed by mass-specific oxygen consumption rate and heat production. Axenic culture also caused higher activities of the antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase and catalase, and led to increased resistance to high temperature, which was further exacerbated by mutation in eat-2. These results show that axenic medium up-regulates a variety of somatic maintenance functions including oxidative and thermal stress resistance and that food restriction due to axenic growth and to mutation in eat-2 are very similar but not identical.
Experimental Gerontology | 2002
Koen Houthoofd; Bart P. Braeckman; Isabelle Lenaerts; Kristel Brys; Annemie De Vreese; Sylvie Van Eygen; Jacques R. Vanfleteren
Dietary restriction (DR) is the most consistent means of extending life span throughout the animal kingdom. Multiple mechanisms by which DR may act have been proposed but none are clearly predominant. We asked whether metabolic rate and stress resistance is altered in Caenorhabditis elegans in response to DR. DR was imposed in two complementary ways: by growing wild-type worms in liquid medium supplemented with reduced concentrations of bacteria and by using eat-2 mutants, which have a feeding defect. Metabolic rate was not reduced when we fed wild-type worms reduced food and was up-regulated in the eat-2 mutants in liquid culture, as assessed by oxygen consumption rate and heat production. The specific activity levels of the antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase showed small increases when we reduced food in wild-type worms, but restricted worms acquired no elevated protection against paraquat and hydrogen peroxide. eat-2 mutants showed elevated specific activities of SOD and catalase relative to wild type in liquid culture. These results indicate that the effects imparted by DR and the eat-2 mutation are not identical, and they contradict, at least in C. elegans, the widespread belief that CR acts by lowering the rate of metabolism.
Experimental Gerontology | 2007
Kristel Brys; Jacques R. Vanfleteren; Bart P. Braeckman
The integration of the rate-of-living and oxidative damage theory of aging predicts that lifespan extension is linked to low energy metabolism, low ROS production rates, low molecular damage and a slow aging rate. In the long-lived Caenorhabditis elegans Ins/IGF-1 mutant daf-2(e1370), low carbonylation levels and postponed morphological decline comply with the latter two of these predictions. However, metabolic rates in daf-2(e1370) refute the rate-of-living theory. The apparent contradiction between increased ROS generation and long lifespan in daf-2(e1370) is reconciled by an enhanced stress defense, acknowledging oxidative damage as a probable cause of aging.
Experimental Gerontology | 2002
Koen Houthoofd; Bart P. Braeckman; Isabelle Lenaerts; Kristel Brys; Annemie De Vreese; Sylvie Van Eygen; Jacques R. Vanfleteren
The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans responds to unfavourable environmental conditions by arresting development and entering diapause as a dauer larva. Dauers can survive several times the normal life span and the duration of the dauer state has no effect on postdauer life span. This led to the suggestion that dauers are non-ageing, and that dauers eventually perish as the consequence of depletion of stored nutrients. We have investigated physiological changes associated with long-term diapause survival, and found that dauer larvae slowly develop senescence-like symptoms, including decrease of metabolic capacity, aconitase enzyme activity, and ATP stores, and increase of lipofuscin- and oxidised flavin-specific fluorescence. However, these changes are reversed when the dauers recover. Thus senescence can occur before attainment of reproductive maturity, and furthermore, is reversible. Other life processes, including respiration rate and heat output, remain unaltered over four weeks of diapause at 24 degrees C. Possible determinants of the enhanced life maintenance include increased resistance to oxidative stress provided by enhanced superoxide dismutase and catalase activities, and a shift to a highly reducing redox status.
Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2002
Bart P. Braeckman; Koen Houthoofd; Kristel Brys; Isabelle Lenaerts; Annemie De Vreese; Sylvie Van Eygen; Hilda Raes; Jacques R. Vanfleteren
Mutation in any of the four clock genes (clk-1, clk-2, clk-3, gro-1) causes an average slowing down of many temporal processes, and an increase of mean life span. The latter effect has been linked to the slow phenotype, and it has been reasoned that any reduction of the rate of living would reduce the load of oxidative damage, which is thought to drive the ageing process. To test this model we measured several parameters describing metabolic output in wild type worms and all four Clk mutants. We found no gross changes in metabolic output, as assessed from oxygen consumption and heat production rates, lucigenin-mediated light production capacity, ATP content, and lipofuscin autofluorescence. Catalase and superoxide dismutase (SOD) were variably altered, but not cooperatively, as would be expected to enhance reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenging activity. Thus we conclude that the prolonged life span of Clk mutants cannot be attributed to reduced metabolic rate or an increased activity of the major antioxidant enzymes catalase and SOD.
Aging Cell | 2005
Koen Houthoofd; Manuel A. Fidalgo; David Hoogewijs; Bart P. Braeckman; Isabelle Lenaerts; Kristel Brys; Filip Matthijssens; Annemie De Vreese; Sylvie Van Eygen; Manuel Muñoz; Jacques R. Vanfleteren
The insulin/insulin‐like growth factor‐1 (Ins/IGF‐1) pathway regulates the aging rate of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. We describe other features of the three Ins/IGF‐1 mutants daf‐2, age‐1 and aap‐1. We show that the investigated Ins/IGF‐1 mutants all have a reduced body volume, reduced reproductive capacity, increased ATP concentrations and an elevated stress resistance. We also observed that heat production is lower in these mutants, although the respiration rate was similar or higher compared with wild‐type individuals, suggesting a metabolic shift in these mutants.
BMC Biology | 2010
Kristel Brys; Natascha Castelein; Filip Matthijssens; Jacques R. Vanfleteren; Bart P. Braeckman
BackgroundThe gene daf-2 encodes the single insulin/insulin growth factor-1-like receptor of Caenorhabditis elegans. The reduction-of-function allele e1370 induces several metabolic alterations and doubles lifespan.ResultsWe found that the e1370 mutation alters aerobic energy production substantially. In wild-type worms the abundance of key mitochondrial proteins declines with age, accompanied by a dramatic decrease in energy production, although the mitochondrial mass, inferred from the mitochondrial DNA copy number, remains unaltered. In contrast, the age-dependent decrease of both key mitochondrial proteins and bioenergetic competence is considerably attenuated in daf-2(e1370) adult animals. The increase in daf-2(e1370) mitochondrial competence is associated with a higher membrane potential and increased reactive oxygen species production, but with little damage to mitochondrial protein or DNA. Together these results point to a higher energetic efficiency of daf-2(e1370) animals.ConclusionsWe conclude that low daf-2 function alters the overall rate of ageing by a yet unidentified mechanism with an indirect protective effect on mitochondrial function.
Neurobiology of Aging | 2005
Koen Houthoofd; Bart P. Braeckman; Isabelle Lenaerts; Kristel Brys; Filip Matthijssens; Annemie De Vreese; Sylvie Van Eygen; Jacques R. Vanfleteren
In Caenorhabditis elegans, metabolism and life expectancy respond to environmental cues of food availability and temperature. Several genes act in a neuroendocrine, DAF-2, insulin/IGF-1 receptor-like pathway in which reduced signaling affects metabolism and increases longevity. Here we describe the effect of reduced DAF-2 signaling on several parameters of metabolism including rates of oxygen consumption and heat output, the calorimetric/respirometric ratio, ATP levels, XTT reduction capacity and accumulation of lipofuscin. We also asked whether the DAF-2 signaling pathway mediates the metabolic and longevity effects of axenic culture medium. We show that both interventions act either antagonistically or in concert, depending on the parameter examined and that axenic culture medium, unlike DAF-2 signaling, does not need DAF-16 for generating these effects. In addition, we provide evidence that DAF-2 signaling controls mitochondrial bioenergetics by adjusting the rate of ATP synthesis to the rate of ATP utilization and by regulating the heat-producing proton leak pathway.
Tissue & Cell | 1999
Bart P. Braeckman; Kristel Brys; Urszula Rzeznik; Hilda Raes
Cadmium (Cd) pathology was studied in an insect cell line (Aedes albopictusC6/36) at the ultrastructural level. The most prominent pathological changes occurred at the level of the nucleus: chromatin clumping, indentations, filling and dilatation of the perinuclear cisternae and an increased amount of bound ribosomes were observed. In the cytoplasm, condensation and swelling of mitochondria, increase of both free and membrane-bound ribosomes, filling and dilatation of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, and increase of the lysosomal system were the most conspicuous effects. The increased content of the perinuclear and cytoplasmic cisternae was probably due to an increased protein synthesis or a disturbance of the protein export system. This picture differed clearly from the osmotically swollen electron-lucent cisternae that have been described in other pathological situations. The enhancement of the lysosomal system was paralleled by a slight but significant stimulation of the acid phosphatase activity in the sublethal Cd concentration range. In vitro experiments suggested that Cd probably acts directly on this enzyme. Abnormal medium acidification in cultures treated with low Cd levels was correlated with an increased production of lactic acid. Together with the morphological data, this suggested a Cd-induced impairment of the aerobic metabolism.
Belgian Journal of Zoology | 2004
Koen Houthoofd; Bart P. Braeckman; Annemie De Vreese; Sylvie Van Eygen; Isabelle Lenaerts; Kristel Brys; Filip Matthijssens; Jacques R. Vanfleteren