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Dive into the research topics where Marnix Gorissen is active.

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Featured researches published by Marnix Gorissen.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2009

Two divergent leptin paralogues in zebrafish (Danio rerio) that originate early in teleostean evolution.

Marnix Gorissen; Nicholas J. Bernier; Sander B. Nabuurs; Gert Flik; Mark O. Huising

We describe duplicate leptin genes in zebrafish (Danio rerio) that share merely 24% amino acid identity with each other and only 18% with human leptin. We were also able to retrieve a second leptin gene in medaka (Oryzias latipes). The presence of duplicate leptin genes in these two distantly related teleosts suggests that duplicate leptin genes are a common feature of teleostean fishes. Despite low primary sequence conservation, we are confident in assigning orthology between mammalian and zebrafish leptins for several reasons. First, both zebrafish leptins share their characteristic gene structure and display key features of conserved synteny with mammalian leptin genes. Secondly, the cysteine residues that make up leptins single disulphide bridge are equally spaced in mammalian and zebrafish leptins and are unique among all members of the class-I helical cytokine family. Thirdly, the zebrafish leptins cluster with other fish leptins and mammalian leptins in phylogenetic analysis, supported by high bootstrap values. Within the leptin cluster, leptin-b forms a separate clade with the leptin-b orthologue from medaka. Finally, our prediction of the tertiary structures shows that both leptins conform to the typical four alpha-helix bundle structure of the class-I alpha-helical cytokines. The zebrafish leptins are differentially expressed; the liver shows high leptin-a expression (in concordance with what we observed for carp leptins), while leptin-b is expressed at much lower levels, which are downregulated further upon fasting. The finding of duplicate leptin genes in teleosts adds to our understanding of the evolution of leptin physiology in the early vertebrate lineage.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2012

Recombinant human leptin attenuates stress axis activity in common carp (Cyprinus carpio L.)

Marnix Gorissen; Nicholas J. Bernier; R. Manuel; Stefan de Gelder; Juriaan R. Metz; Mark O. Huising; Gert Flik

Proper functioning of the endocrine stress axis requires communication between the stress axis and other regulatory mechanisms. We here describe an intimate interplay between the stress axis and recombinant human leptin (rhLeptin) in a teleostean fish, the common carp Cyprinus carpio. Restraint stress (by netting up to 96h) increased plasma cortisol but did not affect hepatic leptin expression. Perifusion of pituitary glands or head kidneys with rhLeptin revealed direct effects of rhLeptin on both tissues. RhLeptin suppresses basal and CRF-induced ACTH-secretion in a rapid and concentration-dependent manner. The rhLeptin effect persisted for over an hour after administration had been terminated. RhLeptin decreases basal interrenal cortisol secretion in vitro, and by doing so attenuates ACTH-stimulated cortisol production; rhLeptin does not affect interrenal ACTH-sensitivity. Our findings show that the endocrine stress axis activity and leptin are inseparably linked in a teleostean fish, a notion relevant to further our insights in the evolution of leptin physiology in vertebrates.


Animal Biology | 2006

Peptides and proteins regulating food intake : a comparative view

Marnix Gorissen; Gert Flik; Mark O. Huising

Energy homeostasis is under multiple endocrine and neural controls that involve both central and peripheral hormones and neuropeptides. Disorders of energy balance (e.g., obesitas and anorexia nervosa) are caused by subtle dysregulation of these regulatory mechanisms. The hypothalamic arcuate nucleus is a main site of central regulation where two distinct subpopulations of neurons co-express either neuropeptide Y (NPY) and agouti-related protein (AgRP), or proopiomelanocortin (POMC) and cocaine and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART): the former set of peptides increases food intake; the latter decreases food intake and affect energy metabolism. Key peripheral hormones affecting energy metabolism include cholecystokinin (CCK), leptin and insulin, which decrease food intake, and ghrelin, which increases food intake. CCK and ghrelin regulate food intake in the short term (by affecting meal size), whereas leptin and insulin regulate food intake over longer periods spanning several meals. These signals and their physiology are reasonably well understood in mammals. On the other hand, knowledge on energy metabolism in earlier vertebrates is scant. Recently characterised central food intake regulatory mechanisms in fish suggest that they operate in a manner similar to their mammalian counterparts. Peripheral mechanisms have been poorly studied outside mammals. The recent identification of leptin in several fish species provides new insights and opportunities to enhance our understanding of the regulation of food intake. Comparative analysis of these peripheral mechanisms may shed new light on the function and evolution of the mechanisms controlling energy homeostasis. In this review, we summarise recent developments in understanding of mechanisms and signals that regulate energy balance in mammals, and compare these to what we now know about their orthologues in earlier vertebrates, with a particular focus on bony fishes.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2012

Differential effects of chronic hypoxia and feed restriction on the expression of leptin and its receptor, food intake regulation and the endocrine stress response in common carp

Nicholas J. Bernier; Marnix Gorissen; Gert Flik

SUMMARY Appetite suppression is a common response to hypoxia in fish that confers significant energy savings. Yet little is known about the endocrine signals involved in the regulation of food intake during chronic hypoxia. Thus, we assessed the impact of chronic hypoxia on food intake, the expression of the potent anorexigenic signal leptin and its receptor (lepr), the mRNA levels of key hypothalamic appetite-regulating genes, and the activity of the hypothalamic–pituitary–interrenal (HPI) axis in common carp, Cyprinus carpio. Fish exposed to 10% O2 saturation for 8 days were chronically anorexic and consumed on average 79% less food than normoxic controls. Hypoxia also elicited gradual and parallel increases in the expression of liver leptin-a-I, leptin-a-II, lepr and erythropoietin, a known hypoxia-responsive gene. In contrast, the liver mRNA levels of all four genes remained unchanged in normoxic fish pair-fed to the hypoxia treatment. In the hypothalamus, expression of the appetite-regulating genes were consistent with an inhibition and stimulation of hunger in the hypoxic and pair-fed fish, respectively, and reduced feed intake led to a decrease in lepr. Although both treatments elicited similar delayed increases in plasma cortisol, they were characterized by distinct HPI axis effector transcript levels and a marked differential increase in pituitary lepr expression. Together, these results show that a reduction in O2 availability, and not feed intake, stimulates liver leptin-a expression in common carp and suggest that this pleiotropic cytokine is involved in the regulation of appetite and the endocrine stress response during chronic hypoxia.


Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy | 2014

Leptin in teleostean fish, towards the origins of leptin physiology

Marnix Gorissen; Gert Flik

Teleostean leptin was first cloned in 2005, more than a decade after the discovery of mammalian leptin. The reason for this delay lies in the very poor primary sequence conservation (∼13-25%) between mammalian and fish leptins. These low sequence conservations indicate a high degree of molecular evolvability and warrant a search for different and original functions of leptin in teleosts. Indeed, new and original insights are obtained because of the unique phylogenetic position of teleostean fish as the earliest vertebrates and because of their ectothermy, which means that teleosts are more flexible in changing their metabolism than mammals and leptin could play a role in this flexibility. Research during the last decade reveals that leptin is a truly pleiotropic hormone in fish and mammals alike, with functions among others in the regulation of food intake and body weight, development, but also in the regulation of the stress axis and acclimation processes to for instance low oxygen levels in the water. In this review, we provide an overview of the teleostean leptin work done in the last ten years, and demonstrate that the power of a comparative approach leads to new insights on the origins of leptin physiology.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2011

STAT genes display differential evolutionary rates that correlate with their roles in the endocrine and immune system

Marnix Gorissen; Erik de Vrieze; Gert Flik; Mark O. Huising

We identified orthologues of all mammalian Janus kinase (JAK) and signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) genes in teleostean fishes, indicating that these protein families were already largely complete before the teleost tetrapod split, 450 million years ago. In mammals, the STAT repertoire consists of seven genes (STAT1, -2, -3, -4, -5a, -5b, and -6). Our phylogenetic analyses show that STAT proteins that are recruited downstream of endocrine hormones (STAT3 and STAT5a and -5b) show a markedly higher primary sequence conservation compared with STATs that convey immune signals (STAT1-2, STAT4, and STAT6). A similar dichotomy in evolutionary conservation is observed for the JAK family of protein kinases, which activate STATs. The ligands to activate the JAK/STAT-signalling pathway include hormones and cytokines such as GH, prolactin, interleukin 6 (IL6) and IL12. In this paper, we examine the evolutionary forces that have acted on JAK/STAT signalling in the endocrine and immune systems and discuss the reasons why the JAK/STAT cascade that conveys classical immune signals has diverged much faster compared with endocrine JAK/STAT paralogues.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2015

Stress in Atlantic salmon: response to unpredictable chronic stress

Angelico Madaro; Rolf Erik Olsen; Tore S. Kristiansen; Lars O.E. Ebbesson; Tom O. Nilsen; Gert Flik; Marnix Gorissen

Combinations of stressors occur regularly throughout an animals life, especially in agriculture and aquaculture settings. If an animal fails to acclimate to these stressors, stress becomes chronic, and a condition of allostatic overload arises with negative results for animal welfare. In the current study, we describe effects of exposing Atlantic salmon parr to an unpredictable chronic stressor (UCS) paradigm for 3 weeks. The paradigm involves exposure of fish to seven unpredictable stressors three times a day. At the end of the trial, experimental and control fish were challenged with yet another novel stressor and sampled before and 1 h after that challenge. Plasma cortisol decreased steadily over time in stressed fish, indicative of exhaustion of the endocrine stress axis. This was confirmed by a lower cortisol response to the novel stressor at the end of the stress period in chronically stressed fish compared with the control group. In the preoptic area (POA) and pituitary gland, chronic stress resulted in decreased gene expression of 11βhsd2, gr1 and gr2 in the POA and increased expression of those genes in the pituitary gland. POA crf expression and pituitary expression of pomcs and mr increased, whereas interrenal gene expression was unaffected. Exposure to the novel stressor had no effect on POA and interrenal gene expression. In the pituitary, crfr1, pomcs, 11βhsd2, grs and mr were down-regulated. In summary, our results provide a novel overview of the dynamic changes that occur at every level of the hypothalamic-pituitary gland-interrenal gland (HPI) axis as a result of chronic stress in Atlantic salmon.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2014

Unpredictable chronic stress decreases inhibitory avoidance learning in Tuebingen long-fin zebrafish: stronger effects in the resting phase than in the active phase

R. Manuel; Marnix Gorissen; Jan Zethof; Lars O.E. Ebbesson; H. van de Vis; Gert Flik; R. van den Bos

Zebrafish (Danio rerio Hamilton) are increasingly used as a model to study the effects of chronic stress on brain and behaviour. In rodents, unpredictable chronic stress (UCS) has a stronger effect on physiology and behaviour during the active phase than during the resting phase. Here, we applied UCS during the daytime (active phase) for 7 and 14 days or during the night-time (resting phase) for 7 nights in an in-house-reared Tuebingen long-fin (TLF) zebrafish strain. Following UCS, inhibitory avoidance learning was assessed using a 3 day protocol where fish learn to avoid swimming from a white to a black compartment where they will receive a 3 V shock. Latencies of entering the black compartment were recorded before training (day 1; first shock) and after training on day 2 (second shock) and day 3 (no shock, tissue sampling). Fish whole-body cortisol content and expression levels of genes related to stress, fear and anxiety in the telencephalon were quantified. Following 14 days of UCS during the day, inhibitory avoidance learning decreased (lower latencies on days 2 and 3); minor effects were found following 7 days of UCS. Following 7 nights of UCS, inhibitory avoidance learning decreased (lower latency on day 3). Whole-body cortisol levels showed a steady increase compared with controls (100%) from 7 days of UCS (139%), to 14 days of UCS (174%) to 7 nights of UCS (231%), suggestive of an increasing stress load. Only in the 7 nights of UCS group did expression levels of corticoid receptor genes (mr, grα, grβ) and of bdnf increase. These changes are discussed as adaptive mechanisms to maintain neuronal integrity and prevent overload, and as being indicative of a state of high stress load. Overall, our data suggest that stressors during the resting phase have a stronger impact than during the active phase. Our data warrant further studies on the effect of UCS on stress axis-related genes, especially grβ; in mammals this receptor has been implicated in glucocorticoid resistance and depression.


Zebrafish | 2015

The effects of environmental enrichment and age-related differences on inhibitory avoidance in zebrafish (Danio rerio Hamilton).

R. Manuel; Marnix Gorissen; M. Stokkermans; Jan Zethof; Lars O.E. Ebbesson; J.W. van de Vis; Gert Flik; R. van den Bos

The inhibitory avoidance paradigm allows the study of mechanisms underlying learning and memory formation in zebrafish (Danio rerio Hamilton). For zebrafish, the physiology and behavior associated with this paradigm are as yet poorly understood. We therefore assessed the effects of environmental enrichment and fish age on inhibitory avoidance learning. Fish raised in an environmentally enriched tank showed decreased anxiety-like behavior and increased exploration. Enrichment greatly reduced inhibitory avoidance in 6-month (6M)- and 12-month (12 M)-old fish. Following inhibitory avoidance, telencephalic mRNA levels of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (pcna), neurogenic differentiation (neurod), cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript 4 (cart4), and cannabinoid receptor 1 (cnr1) were lower in enriched-housed fish, while the ratios of mineralocorticoid receptor (nr3c2)/glucocorticoid receptor α [nr3c1(α)] and glucocorticoid receptor β [nr3c1(β)]/glucocorticoid receptor α [nr3c1(α)] were higher. This was observed for 6M-old fish only, not for 24-month (24 M) old fish. Instead, 24 M-old fish showed delayed inhibitory avoidance, no effects of enrichment, and reduced expression of neuroplasticity genes. Overall, our data show strong differences in inhibitory avoidance behavior between zebrafish of different ages and a clear reduction in avoidance behavior following housing under environmental enrichment.


Genes, Brain and Behavior | 2015

Differences in inhibitory avoidance, cortisol and brain gene expression in TL and AB zebrafish.

Marnix Gorissen; R. Manuel; T.N.M. Pelgrim; W. Mes; M.J.S. de Wolf; Jan Zethof; Gert Flik; R. van den Bos

Recently, we established an inhibitory avoidance paradigm in Tupfel Long‐Fin (TL) zebrafish. Here, we compared task performance of TL fish and fish from the AB strain; another widely used strain and shown to differ genetically and behaviourally from TL fish. Whole‐body cortisol and telencephalic gene expression related to stress, anxiety and fear were measured before and 2 h post‐task. Inhibitory avoidance was assessed in a 3‐day paradigm: fish learn to avoid swimming from a white to a black compartment where a 3V‐shock is given: day 1 (first shock), day 2 (second shock) and day 3 (no shock, sampling). Tupfel Long‐Fin fish rapidly learned to avoid the black compartment and showed an increase in avoidance‐related spatial behaviour in the white compartment across days. In contrast, AB fish showed no inhibitory avoidance learning. AB fish had higher basal cortisol levels and expression levels of stress‐axis related genes than TL fish. Tupfel Long‐Fin fish showed post‐task learning‐related changes in cortisol and gene expression levels, but these responses were not seen in AB fish. We conclude that AB fish show higher cortisol levels and no inhibitory avoidance than TL fish. The differential learning responses of these Danio strains may unmask genetically defined risks for stress‐related disorders.

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Gert Flik

Radboud University Nijmegen

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R. Manuel

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Jan Zethof

Radboud University Nijmegen

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R. van den Bos

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Rolf Erik Olsen

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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