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Featured researches published by Marc Espeel.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

A novel disorder caused by defective biosynthesis of N-linked oligosaccharides due to glucosidase I deficiency

Claudine De Praeter; Gerrit J. Gerwig; Ernst Bause; Lieve K. Nuytinck; Johannes F.G. Vliegenthart; Wilhelm Breuer; Johannis P. Kamerling; Marc Espeel; Jean-Jacques R. Martin; Anne De Paepe; Nora W. C. Chan; Georges Dacremont; Rudy Van Coster

Glucosidase I is an important enzyme in N-linked glycoprotein processing, removing specifically distal alpha-1,2-linked glucose from the Glc3Man9GlcNAc2 precursor after its en bloc transfer from dolichyl diphosphate to a nascent polypeptide chain in the endoplasmic reticulum. We have identified a glucosidase I defect in a neonate with severe generalized hypotonia and dysmorphic features. The clinical course was progressive and was characterized by the occurrence of hepatomegaly, hypoventilation, feeding problems, seizures, and fatal outcome at age 74 d. The accumulation of the tetrasaccharide Glc(alpha1-2)Glc(alpha1-3)Glc(alpha1-3)Man in the patients urine indicated a glycosylation disorder. Enzymological studies on liver tissue and cultured skin fibroblasts revealed a severe glucosidase I deficiency. The residual activity was <3% of that of controls. Glucosidase I activities in cultured skin fibroblasts from both parents were found to be 50% of those of controls. Tissues from the patient subjected to SDS-PAGE followed by immunoblotting revealed strongly decreased amounts of glucosidase I protein in the homogenate of the liver, and a less-severe decrease in cultured skin fibroblasts. Molecular studies showed that the patient was a compound heterozygote for two missense mutations in the glucosidase I gene: (1) one allele harbored a G-->C transition at nucleotide (nt) 1587, resulting in the substitution of Arg at position 486 by Thr (R486T), and (2) on the other allele a T-->C transition at nt 2085 resulted in the substitution of Phe at position 652 by Leu (F652L). The mother was heterozygous for the G-->C transition, whereas the father was heterozygous for the T-->C transition. These base changes were not seen in 100 control DNA samples. A causal relationship between the alpha-glucosidase I deficiency and the disease is postulated.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2007

Neocortical and cerebellar developmental abnormalities in conditions of selective elimination of peroxisomes from brain or from liver

Olga Krysko; Leen Hulshagen; Anneleen Janssen; Günter Schütz; Rüdiger Klein; Melina De Bruycker; Marc Espeel; Pierre Gressens; Myriam Baes

Defects in the formation of the cerebral cortex and the cerebellum are a prominent feature of the peroxisome biogenesis disorder Zellweger syndrome and in mouse models for this disease. The aim of the present study was to investigate the impact of liver and brain peroxisomes on neurodevelopment by analyzing mice with tissue‐selective elimination of peroxisomes. To this end, Pex5‐loxP mice were bred with albumin/α‐fetoprotein (Alfp)‐Cre and nestin (Nes)‐Cre mice. Local elimination of peroxisomes from the brain in Nes‐Pex5 knockout mice caused a delay of cortical neuronal migration and of the formation of cerebellar folia and fissures. Migration of granule cells from the external granular layer was retarded, as was the polarization and branching of Purkinje cells, resulting in a less complex branching pattern and a smaller dendritic tree at P21. The Alfp‐Pex5 knockout mice were affected differently, displaying a partial arrest of neuronal migration in the cerebral neopallium in the postnatal period despite of the incomplete elimination of peroxisomes from liver during embryonic development. Major abnormalities were seen in the formation of the cerebellum of these liver knockout mice, including hypotrophy, impaired foliation, a delay of granule cell migration, increased cell death, and stunted Purkinje cell arborization. In conclusion, these data demonstrate that absence of peroxisomal function both from liver and brain impairs cortical neuronal migration and maturation of the cerebellum, but different pathogenic mechanisms might be involved.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 1991

Liver pathology and immunocytochemistry in congenital peroxisomal diseases: a review

Frank Roels; Marc Espeel; Dirk De Craemer

SummaryDiagnostic and pathogenetic investigations of peroxisomal disorders should include the study of the macroscopic and microscopic pathology of the liver, in addition to careful clinical observations, skeletal X-ray and brain CT scan, assays of very long-chain fatty acids and bile acid intermediates, and selected enzyme activities. This review of the literature also contains novel observations about the following syndromes: cerebro-hepato-renal (Zellweger) syndrome, X-linked and neonatal adrenoleukodystrophies (ALD, NALD), NALD-like syndromes, infantile phytanic acid storage, classical Refsum disease, rhizomelic and other forms of chondrodysplasia punctata (XD, XR, AR), hyperpipecolic acidaemia, primary hyperoxaluria I, pseudo-Zellweger and Zellweger-like syndromes, and single enzyme deficiencies. Microscopic data include catalase staining and morphometry of peroxisomes, immunolocalization ofβ-oxidation enzymes, detection of trilamellar, polarizing inclusions in PAS-positive macrophages, fibrosis and iron storage. Peroxisomal enlargement appears to be related to functional deficit inβ-oxidation disorders as well as in rhizomelic chondrodysplasia punctata. Because normal peroxisomal localization of activeβ-oxidation enzymes can accompany a C26β-oxidation deficit, other mechanisms such as impaired transport of metabolites should be investigated. ‘Ghost’-like organelles are shown in the liver of an infantile Refsum patient and in an NALD-like case; immuno-gold labelling of membrane proteins did not reveal ghosts in Zellweger livers.


Gut | 1991

Different types of peroxisomes in human duodenal epithelium.

Frank Roels; Marc Espeel; Marina Pauwels; Dirk De Craemer; H Egberts; P Van der Spek

Peroxisomes are ubiquitous organelles containing enzyme sequences for beta oxidation of fatty acids, synthesis of bile acids, and ether phospholipids. In the inherited peroxisomal diseases one or more enzymes are deficient in hepatic, renal, and fibroblast peroxisomes. We have examined peroxisomes by light and electron microscopy in 29 duodenal biopsy specimens (21 with normal mucosa) after staining for catalase activity, a marker enzyme. Peroxisomes were most numerous in the apices of the nucleus and at the villus base. Two types were distinguished: rounded to oval forms with a median lesser diameter of 0.23-0.31 microns, and tubular, vermiform organelles 0.1 microns thick and up to 3 microns long. Both types coexist in most patients. Tilting of sections and examination of semithin sections at 120 kV did not show connections between individual organelles. By morphometry, volume density was at least 0.45-0.62% of cellular volume, compared to 1.05% in human liver. In contrast, in four out of five individuals surface density of the peroxisomal membrane was 1.4-2.3 times higher than in control livers; this is expected to favour the exchange of metabolites. We suggest that intestinal peroxisomes contribute substantially to the breakdown of very long chain fatty acids.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 1992

Bone Dysplasia Associated with Phytanic Acid Accumulation and Deficient Plasmalogen Synthesis: A Peroxisomal Entity Amenable to Plasmapheresis

J. A. M. Smeitink; F. A. Beemer; Marc Espeel; R. A. M. G. Donckerwolcke; Cornelis Jakobs; Ronald J. A. Wanders; R. B. H. Schutgens; Frank Roels; M. Duran; L. Dorland; Rolf M.F. Berger; B. T. Poll-The

The diagnosis of inborn errors of peroxisomal metabolism is based on a number of clinical and biochemical characteristics. The combination of skeletal abnormalities and peroxisomal dysfunction is seen in the rhizomelic form of chondrodysplasia punctata (RCDP) and in Zellweger syndrome (Wanders et al 1988). Recently two patients were described with a new type of chondrodysplasia punctata associated with the characteristic peroxisomal abnormalities observed in RCDP: (1) accumulation of phytanic acid in plasma, (2) a defect in plasmalogen synthesis, and (3) presence of the unprocessed form of peroxisomal thiolase protein (Pike et al 1990; Poll-The et all 1991)


Biochimie | 1993

HUMAN LIVER PATHOLOGY IN PEROXISOMAL DISEASES - A REVIEW INCLUDING NOVEL DATA.

Frank Roels; Marc Espeel; F Poggi; Hanna Mandel; L. Van Maldergem; J. M. Saudubray

Results from electron microscopic morphometry, enzyme cytochemistry and immunolocalization in liver biopsies are reviewed. Emphasis is put on the following aspects: 1) relationship between peroxisomal size and enzyme concentration; 2) abnormal enlargement of peroxisomes in many congenital disorders with peroxisomal dysfunction; 3) normal localization of matrix enzymes in several patients with peroxisomal dysfunction, with the exception of catalase, which is mainly cytoplasmic; 4) ghost-like peroxisomes in the liver of several syndromes but not in nine cases labelled as Zellweger; 5) discrepancies between liver and cultured fibroblasts; 6) trilamellar, regularly spaced inclusions, large stacks of which are birefringent, indicate a peroxisomal dysfunction; their absence does not exclude it. The same rule holds for lipid in macrophages which is insoluble in acetone and n-hexane (after fixation). The chemical nature of these two storage materials remains unclear; and 7) proliferation of human peroxisomes is frequent in acquired liver diseases and drug toxicity, but is never accompanied by an increase in size, in contrast to the effect of the fibrates and phthalates in rat and mouse. Novel data from seven peroxisomal patients are included.


Human Fertility | 2014

Age-associated differential microRNA levels in human follicular fluid reveal pathways potentially determining fertility and success of in vitro fertilization.

Araceli Diez-Fraile; Tim Lammens; Kelly Tilleman; Wojciech Witkowski; Bruno Verhasselt; De Sutter P; Yves Benoit; Marc Espeel; Katharina D'Herde

Abstract Reproductive life span and fertility have been shown to depend on successful early folliculogenesis, which involves cell-to-cell communication and the concerted regulation of gene expression at both the oocyte and granulosa cell levels. Recently, micro RNAs (miRNAs) were identified as fine-tuners of gene expression. Here, we report that miRNAs can readily be detected within membrane-enclosed vesicles of human follicular fluid. MiRNA expression profiling of the follicular fluid of younger (< 31 years) and older (> 38 years) women revealed a set of four differentially expressed miRNAs. The predicted targets of these miRNAs are clearly enriched in genes involved in heparan-sulfate biosynthesis, extracellular matrix–receptor interaction, carbohydrate digestion and absorption, p53 signaling, and cytokine–cytokine-receptor interaction. Several of these pathways have been reported to be determinants of fertility, suggesting that this set of miRNAs and their respective targets should be evaluated in relation to reproductive aging and assisted reproduction.


Clinical & Experimental Metastasis | 1989

The flavonoid tangeretin inhibits invasion of MO4 mouse cells into embryonic chick heartin vitro

Marc Bracke; B Vyncke; Nicolas Van Larebeke; Erik Bruyneel; Georges De Bruyne; Guido H. De Pestel; Walter J. De Coster; Marc Espeel; Marc M. Mareel

Tangeretin, a flavonoid from citrus plants, was found to inhibit the invasion of MO4 cells (Kirsten murine sarcoma virus transformed fetal mouse cells) into embryonic chick heart fragmentsin vitro. The flavonoid appeared to be chemically stable in tissue culture medium, and the anti-invasive effect was reversible on omission of the molecule from the medium. Unlike (+)-catechin, another anti-invasive flavonoid, tangeretin bound poorly to extracellular matrix. It did not alter fucosylated surface glycopeptides of MO4 cells. Tangeretin seemed not to act as a microtubule inhibitor, as immunocytochemistry revealed no disturbance of the cytoplasmic microtubule complex. However, at antiinvasive concentrations of tangeretin, cell proliferation and thymidine incorporation appeared to be inhibited. When cultured on an artificial substrate, treated MO4 cells were less elongated, covered a larger surface area and exhibited a slower directional migration than untreated cells. From the decrease in ATP content in MO4 cells after tangeretin treatment, we deduce that this flavonoid inhibits a number of intracellular processes, which leads to an inhibition of cell motility and hence of invasion.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015

Mitochondria in peroxisome-deficient hepatocytes exhibit impaired respiration, depleted DNA, and PGC-1α independent proliferation

Annelies Peeters; Abhijit Babaji Shinde; Ruud Dirkx; Joél Smet; Katrien De Bock; Marc Espeel; Ilse Vanhorebeek; Arnaud Vanlander; Rudy Van Coster; Peter Carmeliet; Marc Fransen; Paul P. Van Veldhoven; Myriam Baes

The tight interrelationship between peroxisomes and mitochondria is illustrated by their cooperation in lipid metabolism, antiviral innate immunity and shared use of proteins executing organellar fission. In addition, we previously reported that disruption of peroxisome biogenesis in hepatocytes severely impacts on mitochondrial integrity, primarily damaging the inner membrane. Here we investigated the molecular impairments of the dysfunctional mitochondria in hepatocyte selective Pex5 knockout mice. First, by using blue native electrophoresis and in-gel activity stainings we showed that the respiratory complexes were differentially affected with reduction of complexes I and III and incomplete assembly of complex V, whereas complexes II and IV were normally active. This resulted in impaired oxygen consumption in cultured Pex5(-/-) hepatocytes. Second, mitochondrial DNA was depleted causing an imbalance in the expression of mitochondrial- and nuclear-encoded subunits of the respiratory chain complexes. Third, mitochondrial membranes showed increased permeability and fluidity despite reduced content of the polyunsaturated fatty acid docosahexaenoic acid. Fourth, the affected mitochondria in peroxisome deficient hepatocytes displayed increased oxidative stress. Acute deletion of PEX5 in vivo using adeno-Cre virus phenocopied these effects, indicating that mitochondrial perturbations closely follow the loss of functional peroxisomes in time. Likely to compensate for the functional impairments, the volume of the mitochondrial compartment was increased several folds. This was not driven by PGC-1α but mediated by activation of PPARα, possibly through c-myc overexpression. In conclusion, loss of peroxisomal metabolism in hepatocytes perturbs the mitochondrial inner membrane, depletes mitochondrial DNA and causes mitochondrial biogenesis independent of PGC-1α.


Microscopy Research and Technique | 1997

Biogenesis of peroxisomes in fetal liver

Marc Espeel; Marianne Depreter; Roberta Nardacci; Katharina D'Herde; Ingrid Kerckaert; Stefania Stefanini; Frank Roels

Peroxisomes are single membrane‐limited cell organelles that are involved in numerous metabolic functions. Peroxisomes do not contain DNA; the matrix and membrane proteins are encoded by the nuclear genome. It is assumed that new peroxisomes are formed by division of existing organelles. The present article gives an overview of microscopic studies and recent unpublished results dealing with peroxisome biogenesis in mammalian fetal liver and presents data on peroxisomes in oocytes.

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Dirk De Craemer

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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B. T. Poll-The

Boston Children's Hospital

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Hanna Mandel

Boston Children's Hospital

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J. A. M. Smeitink

Boston Children's Hospital

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J. M. Saudubray

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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