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Dive into the research topics where Lieve Umans is active.

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Featured researches published by Lieve Umans.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2002

Neuronal Deficiency of Presenilin 1 Inhibits Amyloid Plaque Formation and Corrects Hippocampal Long-Term Potentiation But Not a Cognitive Defect of Amyloid Precursor Protein [V717I] Transgenic Mice

Ilse Dewachter; Delphine Reversé; Nathalie Caluwaerts; Laurence Ris; Cuno Kuiperi; Chris Van den Haute; Kurt Spittaels; Lieve Umans; Lutgarde Serneels; Els Thiry; Dieder Moechars; M Mercken; Emile Godaux; Fred Van Leuven

In the brain of Alzheimers disease (AD) patients, neurotoxic amyloid peptides accumulate and are deposited as senile plaques. A major therapeutic strategy aims to decrease production of amyloid peptides by inhibition of γ-secretase. Presenilins are polytopic transmembrane proteins that are essential for γ-secretase activity during development and in amyloid production. By loxP/Cre-recombinase-mediated deletion, we generated mice with postnatal, neuron-specific presenilin-1 (PS1) deficiency, denoted PS1(n−/−), that were viable and fertile, with normal brain morphology. In adult PS1(n−/−) mice, levels of endogenous brain amyloid peptides were strongly decreased, concomitant with accumulation of amyloid precursor protein (APP) C-terminal fragments. In the cross of APP[V717I]xPS1 (n−/−) double transgenic mice, the neuronal absence of PS1 effectively prevented amyloid pathology, even in mice that were 18 months old. This contrasted sharply with APP[V717I] single transgenic mice that all develop amyloid pathology at the age of 10–12 months. In APP[V717I]xPS1 (n−/−) mice, long-term potentiation (LTP) was practically rescued at the end of the 2 hr observation period, again contrasting sharply with the strongly impaired LTP in APP[V717I] mice. The findings demonstrate the critical involvement of amyloid peptides in defective LTP in APP transgenic mice. Although these data open perspectives for therapy of AD by γ-secretase inhibition, the neuronal absence of PS1 failed to rescue the cognitive defect, assessed by the object recognition test, of the parent APP[V717I] transgenic mice. This points to potentially detrimental effects of accumulating APP C99 fragments and demands further study of the consequences of inhibition of γ-secretase activity. In addition, our data highlight the complex functional relation of APP and PS1 to cognition and neuronal plasticity in adult and aging brain.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

Conditional deletion of Smad1 and Smad5 in somatic cells of male and female gonads leads to metastatic tumor development in mice

Stephanie A. Pangas; Xiaohui Li; Lieve Umans; An Zwijsen; Danny Huylebroeck; Carolina Gutierrez; Degang Wang; James F. Martin; Soazik P. Jamin; Richard R. Behringer; Elizabeth J. Robertson; Martin M. Matzuk

ABSTRACT The transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) family has critical roles in the regulation of fertility. In addition, the pathogenesis of some human cancers is attributed to misregulation of TGFβ function and SMAD2 or SMAD4 mutations. There are limited mouse models for the BMP signaling SMADs (BR-SMADs) 1, 5, and 8 because of embryonic lethality and suspected genetic redundancy. Using tissue-specific ablation in mice, we deleted the BR-SMADs from somatic cells of ovaries and testes. Single conditional knockouts for Smad1 or Smad5 or mice homozygous null for Smad8 are viable and fertile. Female double Smad1 Smad5 and triple Smad1 Smad5 Smad8 conditional knockout mice become infertile and develop metastatic granulosa cell tumors. Male double Smad1 Smad5 conditional knockout mice are fertile but demonstrate metastatic testicular tumor development. Microarray analysis indicated significant alterations in expression of genes related to the TGFβ pathway, as well as genes involved in infertility and extracellular matrix production. These data strongly implicate the BR-SMADs as part of a critical developmental pathway in ovaries and testis that, when disrupted, leads to malignant transformation.


Biology of Reproduction | 2008

Functional Redundancy of TGF-beta Family Type I Receptors and Receptor-Smads in Mediating Anti-Müllerian Hormone-Induced Müllerian Duct Regression in the Mouse

Grant D. Orvis; Soazik P. Jamin; Kin Ming Kwan; Yuji Mishina; Vesa Kaartinen; S Huang; Anita B. Roberts; Lieve Umans; Danny Huylebroeck; An Zwijsen; Degang Wang; James F. Martin; Richard R. Behringer

Amniotes, regardless of genetic sex, develop two sets of genital ducts: the Wolffian and Müllerian ducts. For normal sexual development to occur, one duct must differentiate into its corresponding organs, and the other must regress. In mammals, the Wolffian duct differentiates into the male reproductive tract, mainly the vasa deferentia, epididymides, and seminal vesicles, whereas the Müllerian duct develops into the four components of the female reproductive tract, the oviducts, uterus, cervix, and upper third of the vagina. In males, the fetal Leydig cells produce testosterone, which stimulates the differentiation of the Wolffian duct, whereas the Sertoli cells of the fetal testes express anti-Müllerian hormone, which activates the regression of the Müllerian duct. Anti-Müllerian hormone is a member of the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) family of secreted signaling molecules and has been shown to signal through the BMP pathway. It binds to its type II receptor, anti-Müllerian hormone receptor 2 (AMHR2), in the Müllerian duct mesenchyme and through an unknown mechanism(s); the mesenchyme induces the regression of the Müllerian duct mesoepithelium. Using tissue-specific gene inactivation with an Amhr2-Cre allele, we have determined that two TGF-beta type I receptors (Acvr1 and Bmpr1a) and all three BMP receptor-Smads (Smad1, Smad5, and Smad8) function redundantly in transducing the anti-Müllerian hormone signal required for Müllerian duct regression. Loss of these genes in the Müllerian duct mesenchyme results in male infertility due to retention of Müllerian duct derivatives in an otherwise virilized male.


Blood | 2011

The EMT regulator Zeb2/Sip1 is essential for murine embryonic hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell differentiation and mobilization

Steven Goossens; Viktor Janzen; Sonia Bartunkova; Tomomasa Yokomizo; Benjamin Drogat; Mihaela Crisan; Katharina Haigh; Eve Seuntjens; Lieve Umans; Tamara Riedt; Pieter Bogaert; Lieven Haenebalcke; Geert Berx; Elaine Dzierzak; Danny Huylebroeck; Jody J. Haigh

Zeb2 (Sip1/Zfhx1b) is a member of the zinc-finger E-box-binding (ZEB) family of transcriptional repressors previously demonstrated to regulate epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) processes during embryogenesis and tumor progression. We found high Zeb2 mRNA expression levels in HSCs and hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs), and examined Zeb2 function in hematopoiesis through a conditional deletion approach using the Tie2-Cre and Vav-iCre recombination mouse lines. Detailed cellular analysis demonstrated that Zeb2 is dispensable for hematopoietic cluster and HSC formation in the aorta-gonadomesonephros region of the embryo, but is essential for normal HSC/HPC differentiation. In addition, Zeb2-deficient HSCs/HPCs fail to properly colonize the fetal liver and/or bone marrow and show enhanced adhesive properties associated with increased β1 integrin and Cxcr4 expression. Moreover, deletion of Zeb2 resulted in embryonic (Tie2-Cre) and perinatal (Vav-icre) lethality due to severe cephalic hemorrhaging and decreased levels of angiopoietin-1 and, subsequently, improper pericyte coverage of the cephalic vasculature. These results reveal essential roles for Zeb2 in embryonic hematopoiesis and are suggestive of a role for Zeb2 in hematopoietic-related pathologies in the adult.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

TDP2 promotes repair of topoisomerase I-mediated DNA damage in the absence of TDP1

Zhihong Zeng; Abhishek Sharma; Limei Ju; Junko Murai; Lieve Umans; Liesbeth Vermeire; Yves Pommier; Shunichi Takeda; Danny Huylebroeck; Keith W. Caldecott; Sherif F. El-Khamisy

The abortive activity of topoisomerases can result in clastogenic and/or lethal DNA damage in which the topoisomerase is covalently linked to the 3′- or 5′-terminus of a DNA strand break. This type of DNA damage is implicated in chromosome translocations and neurological disease and underlies the clinical efficacy of an important class of anticancer topoisomerase ‘poisons’. Tyrosyl DNA phosphodiesterase-1 protects cells from abortive topoisomerase I (Top1) activity by hydrolyzing the 3′-phosphotyrosyl bond that links Top1 to a DNA strand break and is currently the only known human enzyme that displays this activity in cells. Recently, we identified a second tyrosyl DNA phosphodiesterase (TDP2; aka TTRAP/EAPII) that possesses weak 3′-tyrosyl DNA phosphodiesterase (3′-TDP) activity, in vitro. Herein, we have examined whether TDP2 contributes to the repair of Top1-mediated DNA breaks by deleting Tdp1 and Tdp2 separately and together in murine and avian cells. We show that while deletion of Tdp1 in wild-type DT40 cells and mouse embryonic fibroblasts decreases DNA strand break repair rates and cellular survival in response to Top1-induced DNA damage, deletion of Tdp2 does not. However, deletion of both Tdp1 and Tdp2 reduces rates of DNA strand break repair and cell survival below that observed in Tdp1−/− cells, suggesting that Tdp2 contributes to cellular 3′-TDP activity in the absence of Tdp1. Consistent with this idea, over-expression of human TDP2 in Tdp1−/−/Tdp2−/−/− DT40 cells increases DNA strand break repair rates and cell survival above that observed in Tdp1−/− DT40 cells, suggesting that Tdp2 over-expression can partially complement the defect imposed by loss of Tdp1. Finally, mice lacking both Tdp1 and Tdp2 exhibit greater sensitivity to Top1 poisons than do mice lacking Tdp1 alone, further suggesting that Tdp2 contributes to the repair of Top1-mediated DNA damage in the absence of Tdp1. In contrast, we failed to detect a contribution for Tdp1 to repair Top2-mediated damage. Together, our data suggest that Tdp1 and Tdp2 fulfil overlapping roles following Top1-induced DNA damage, but not following Top2-induced DNA damage, in vivo.


Cytokine & Growth Factor Reviews | 2011

Few Smad proteins and many Smad-interacting proteins yield multiple functions and action modes in TGFβ/BMP signaling in vivo

Andrea Conidi; Silvia Cazzola; Karen Beets; Kathleen Coddens; Clara Collart; F.M. Cornelis; Luk Cox; Debruyn Joke; Mariya P. Dobreva; Ruben Dries; Camila V. Esguerra; Annick Francis; Abdelilah Ibrahimi; Roel Kroes; Flore Lesage; Elke Maas; Iván M. Moya; Paulo N. G. Pereira; Elke Stappers; Agata Stryjewska; Veronique van den Berghe; Liesbeth Vermeire; Griet Verstappen; Eve Seuntjens; Lieve Umans; An Zwijsen; Danny Huylebroeck

Signaling by the many ligands of the TGFβ family strongly converges towards only five receptor-activated, intracellular Smad proteins, which fall into two classes i.e. Smad2/3 and Smad1/5/8, respectively. These Smads bind to a surprisingly high number of Smad-interacting proteins (SIPs), many of which are transcription factors (TFs) that co-operate in Smad-controlled target gene transcription in a cell type and context specific manner. A combination of functional analyses in vivo as well as in cell cultures and biochemical studies has revealed the enormous versatility of the Smad proteins. Smads and their SIPs regulate diverse molecular and cellular processes and are also directly relevant to development and disease. In this survey, we selected appropriate examples on the BMP-Smads, with emphasis on Smad1 and Smad5, and on a number of SIPs, i.e. the CPSF subunit Smicl, Ttrap (Tdp2) and Sip1 (Zeb2, Zfhx1b) from our own research carried out in three different vertebrate models.


American Journal of Pathology | 1999

α2-Macroglobulin- and Murinoglobulin-1- Deficient Mice: A Mouse Model for Acute Pancreatitis

Lieve Umans; Lutgarde Serneels; Lut Overbergh; Lou Stas; Fred Van Leuven

Mice deficient in either or both mouse alpha2-macroglobulin (MAM) and murinoglobulin-1 (MUG1) were generated and proved phenotypically normal under standard conditions. Acute pancreatitis was induced with a diet deficient in choline and methionine, supplemented with ethionine. The mortality was less than 25% in wild-type mice, as opposed to at least 56% in knockout mice, and was highest (70%) in MAM-/- mice, with earliest onset at 2 days. Plasma amylase and lipase levels were increased, but pancreatic tissue appeared histologically variable in individual mice. The clinical symptoms were most severe in MAM-/- mice and, surprisingly, were not aggravated in the double knockout mice, suggesting that the lack of proteinase inhibition capacity was not the major problem. Therefore, we analyzed the expression of 21 different cytokines and polypeptide factors in the pancreas of all experimental groups of mice. Interleukin-1-receptor antagonist mRNA was consistently induced by the diet in the pancreas of MAM-/- mice, and transforming growth factor-beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, tumor necrosis factor-beta, beta-lymphotoxin, and interferon-gamma mRNA levels were also increased. The data demonstrate the important role of alpha2-macroglobulin (A2M) in acute pancreatitis as both a proteinase inhibitor and a cytokine carrier. Mice deficient in MAM and/or MUG thus offer new experimental models for defining in vivo the role of the macroglobulins in pancreatitis and in other normal and pathological processes.


Cytokine & Growth Factor Reviews | 2009

Transforming Growth Factor type β and Smad family signaling in stem cell function

Eve Seuntjens; Lieve Umans; An Zwijsen; Maurilio Sampaolesi; Catherine M. Verfaillie; Danny Huylebroeck

Ligands of the Transforming Growth Factor type beta (TGFbeta) family exert multiple and sometimes opposite effects on most cell types in vivo depending on cellular context, which mainly includes the stage of the target cell, the local environment of this cell or niche, and the identity and the dosage of the ligand. Significant progress has been made in the molecular dissection of the regulation of the activity of the ligands and their intracellular signal transduction pathways, including via the canonical Smad pathway where Smads interact with many transcription factors. This knowledge together with results from functional studies within the embryology and stem cell research fields is giving us insight in the role of individual ligands and other components of this signaling system and where and how it regulates many properties of embryonic and adult stem/progenitor cells, which is anticipated to contribute to successful cell-based therapy in the future. We review and discuss recent progress on the effects of Nodal/Activin and Bone Morphogenetic Proteins (BMPs) and their canonical signaling in cells with stem cell properties. We focus on embryonic stem cells and their maintenance and pluripotency, and conversion into selected cell types of neuroectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm, on induced pluripotent cells and on neurogenic cells in the adult brain.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2008

Functions of the type 1 BMP receptor Acvr1 (Alk2) in lens development: cell proliferation, terminal differentiation, and survival.

Ramya Rajagopal; Lisa K. Dattilo; Vesa Kaartinen; Chu-Xia Deng; Lieve Umans; An Zwijsen; Anita B. Roberts; Erwin P. Bottinger; David C. Beebe

PURPOSE Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling is essential for the induction and subsequent development of the lens. The purpose of this study was to analyze the function(s) of the type 1 BMP receptor, Acvr1, in lens development. METHODS Acvr1 was deleted from the surface ectoderm of mouse embryos on embryonic day 9 using the Cre-loxP METHOD: Cell proliferation, cell cycle exit, and apoptosis were measured in tissue sections by immunohistochemistry, immunofluorescence, and TUNEL staining. RESULTS Lenses formed in the absence of Acvr1. However, Acvr1(CKO) (conditional knockout) lenses were small. Acvr1 signaling promoted proliferation at early stages of lens formation but inhibited proliferation at later stages. Inhibition of cell proliferation by Acvr1 was necessary for the proper regionalization of the lens epithelium and promoted the withdrawal of lens fiber cells from the cell cycle. In spite of the failure of all Acvr1(CKO) fiber cells to withdraw from the cell cycle, they expressed proteins characteristic of differentiated fiber cells. Although the stimulation of proliferation was Smad independent, the ability of Acvr1 to promote cell cycle exit later in development depended on classical R-Smad-Smad4 signaling. Loss of Acvr1 led to an increase in apoptosis of lens epithelial and fiber cells. Increased cell death, together with the initial decrease in proliferation, appeared to account for the smaller sizes of the Acvr1(CKO) lenses. CONCLUSIONS This study revealed a novel switch in the functions of Acvr1 in regulating lens cell proliferation. Previously unknown functions mediated by this receptor included regionalization of the lens epithelium and cell cycle exit during fiber cell differentiation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996

Murine alpha-macroglobulins demonstrate divergent activities as neutralizers of transforming growth factor-beta and as inducers of nitric oxide synthesis. A possible mechanism for the endotoxin insensitivity of the alpha2-macroglobulin gene knock-out mouse.

Donna J. Webb; Janice Wen; Jeffrey J. Lysiak; Lieve Umans; Fred Van Leuven; Steven L. Gonias

α2-Macroglobulin null mice demonstrate increased resistance to endotoxin challenge (Umans, L., Serneels, L., Overbergh, L., Van Leuven, F., and Van den Berghe, H. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 19778-19785). We hypothesized that this phenotype might reflect the function of murine α2M (mα2M) as a neutralizer of transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) and inducer of nitric oxide synthesis in vivo. When incubated with wild-type mouse plasma, TGF-β1 and TGF-β2 bound only to mα2M. Alternative TGF-β-binding proteins were not detected in plasma from α2M(−/−) mice. Wild-type mouse plasma, but not plasma from α2M(−/−) mice, inhibited TGF-β1 binding to TGF-β receptors on fibroblasts. Purified mα2M bound TGF-β1 and TGF-β2 with similar affinity; the KD values were 28 ± 4 and 33 ± 4 nM, respectively. Murinoglobulin, the second murine α-macroglobulin, bound both TGF-β isoforms with 30-fold lower affinity. Mα2M counteracted the activities of TGF-β1 and TGF-β2 in an endothelial cell growth assay. Mα2M also induced NO synthesis when incubated with RAW 264.7 cells, an activity which probably results from the neutralization of autocrine TGF-β activity. Human α2M induced NO synthesis comparably to mα2M; however, MUG had no effect. These studies demonstrate that the ability to neutralize TGF-β is a property of mα2M, which is not redundant in the murine α-macroglobulin family or in murine plasma. Mα2M is the only murine α-macroglobulin that promotes NO synthesis. The absence of mα2M, in α2M(−/−) mice, may allow TGF-β to more efficiently suppress excessive iNOS expression following endotoxin challenge.

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Dive into the Lieve Umans's collaboration.

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An Zwijsen

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Lutgarde Serneels

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Danny Huylebroeck

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Fred Van Leuven

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Lut Overbergh

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Carl Hilliker

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Lou Stas

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Susana Lopes

Leiden University Medical Center

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F. Van Leuven

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Kristin Lorent

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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