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Dive into the research topics where Martijn H. Brugman is active.

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Featured researches published by Martijn H. Brugman.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Insertional mutagenesis combined with acquired somatic mutations causes leukemogenesis following gene therapy of SCID-X1 patients

Steven J. Howe; Marc R. Mansour; Kerstin Schwarzwaelder; Cynthia C. Bartholomae; Michael Hubank; Helena Kempski; Martijn H. Brugman; Karin Pike-Overzet; Stephen Chatters; Dick de Ridder; Kimberly Gilmour; Stuart Adams; Susannah I Thornhill; Kathryn L. Parsley; Frank J. T. Staal; Rosemary E. Gale; David C. Linch; Jinhua Bayford; Lucie Brown; Michelle Quaye; Christine Kinnon; Philip Ancliff; David Webb; Manfred Schmidt; Christof von Kalle; H. Bobby Gaspar; Adrian J. Thrasher

X-linked SCID (SCID-X1) is amenable to correction by gene therapy using conventional gammaretroviral vectors. Here, we describe the occurrence of clonal T cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) promoted by insertional mutagenesis in a completed gene therapy trial of 10 SCID-X1 patients. Integration of the vector in an antisense orientation 35 kb upstream of the protooncogene LIM domain only 2 (LMO2) caused overexpression of LMO2 in the leukemic clone. However, leukemogenesis was likely precipitated by the acquisition of other genetic abnormalities unrelated to vector insertion, including a gain-of-function mutation in NOTCH1, deletion of the tumor suppressor gene locus cyclin-dependent kinase 2A (CDKN2A), and translocation of the TCR-beta region to the STIL-TAL1 locus. These findings highlight a general toxicity of endogenous gammaretroviral enhancer elements and also identify a combinatorial process during leukemic evolution that will be important for risk stratification and for future protocol design.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

Vector integration is nonrandom and clustered and influences the fate of lymphopoiesis in SCID-X1 gene therapy

Annette Deichmann; Salima Hacein-Bey-Abina; Manfred Schmidt; Alexandrine Garrigue; Martijn H. Brugman; Jingqiong Hu; Hanno Glimm; Gabor Gyapay; Bernard Prum; Christopher C. Fraser; Nicolas Fischer; Kerstin Schwarzwaelder; Maria Luise Siegler; Dick de Ridder; Karin Pike-Overzet; Steven J. Howe; Adrian J. Thrasher; Gerard Wagemaker; Ulrich Abel; Frank J. T. Staal; Eric Delabesse; Jean Luc Villeval; Bruce J. Aronow; Christophe Hue; Claudia Prinz; Manuela Wissler; Chuck Klanke; Jean Weissenbach; Ian E. Alexander; Alain Fischer

Recent reports have challenged the notion that retroviruses and retroviral vectors integrate randomly into the host genome. These reports pointed to a strong bias toward integration in and near gene coding regions and, for gammaretroviral vectors, around transcription start sites. Here, we report the results obtained from a large-scale mapping of 572 retroviral integration sites (RISs) isolated from cells of 9 patients with X-linked SCID (SCID-X1) treated with a retrovirus-based gene therapy protocol. Our data showed that two-thirds of insertions occurred in or very near to genes, of which more than half were highly expressed in CD34(+) progenitor cells. Strikingly, one-fourth of all integrations were clustered as common integration sites (CISs). The highly significant incidence of CISs in circulating T cells and the nature of their locations indicate that insertion in many gene loci has an influence on cell engraftment, survival, and proliferation. Beyond the observed cases of insertional mutagenesis in 3 patients, these data help to elucidate the relationship between vector insertion and long-term in vivo selection of transduced cells in human patients with SCID-X1.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

Gammaretrovirus-mediated correction of SCID-X1 is associated with skewed vector integration site distribution in vivo

Kerstin Schwarzwaelder; Steven J. Howe; Manfred Schmidt; Martijn H. Brugman; Annette Deichmann; Hanno Glimm; Sonja Schmidt; Claudia Prinz; Manuela Wissler; Douglas King; Fang Zhang; Kathryn L. Parsley; Kimberly Gilmour; Joanna Sinclair; Jinhua Bayford; Rachel Peraj; Karin Pike-Overzet; Frank J. T. Staal; Dick de Ridder; Christine Kinnon; Ulrich Abel; Gerard Wagemaker; H. Bobby Gaspar; Adrian J. Thrasher; Christof von Kalle

We treated 10 children with X-linked SCID (SCID-X1) using gammaretrovirus-mediated gene transfer. Those with sufficient follow-up were found to have recovered substantial immunity in the absence of any serious adverse events up to 5 years after treatment. To determine the influence of vector integration on lymphoid reconstitution, we compared retroviral integration sites (RISs) from peripheral blood CD3(+) T lymphocytes of 5 patients taken between 9 and 30 months after transplantation with transduced CD34(+) progenitor cells derived from 1 further patient and 1 healthy donor. Integration occurred preferentially in gene regions on either side of transcription start sites, was clustered, and correlated with the expression level in CD34(+) progenitors during transduction. In contrast to those in CD34(+) cells, RISs recovered from engrafted CD3(+) T cells were significantly overrepresented within or near genes encoding proteins with kinase or transferase activity or involved in phosphorus metabolism. Although gross patterns of gene expression were unchanged in transduced cells, the divergence of RIS target frequency between transduced progenitor cells and post-thymic T lymphocytes indicates that vector integration influences cell survival, engraftment, or proliferation.


Stem Cells | 2013

Multipotent stromal cells induce human regulatory T cells through a novel pathway involving skewing of monocytes toward anti‐inflammatory macrophages

Sara M. Melief; Ellen Schrama; Martijn H. Brugman; Machteld M. Tiemessen; Martin J. Hoogduijn; Willem E. Fibbe; Helene Roelofs

Multipotent stromal cells (MSC) have been shown to possess immunomodulatory capacities and are therefore explored as a novel cellular therapy. One of the mechanisms through which MSC modulate immune responses is by the promotion of regulatory T cell (Treg) formation. In this study, we focused on the cellular interactions and secreted factors that are essential in this process. Using an in vitro culture system, we showed that culture‐expanded bone marrow‐derived MSC promote the generation of CD4+CD25hiFoxP3+ T cells in human PBMC populations and that these populations are functionally suppressive. Similar results were obtained with MSC‐conditioned medium, indicating that this process is dependent on soluble factors secreted by the MSC. Antibody neutralization studies showed that TGF‐β1 mediates induction of Tregs. TGF‐β1 is constitutively secreted by MSC, suggesting that the MSC‐induced generation of Tregs by TGF‐β1 was independent of the interaction between MSC and PBMC. Monocyte‐depletion studies showed that monocytes are indispensable for MSC‐induced Treg formation. MSC promote the survival of monocytes and induce differentiation toward macrophage type 2 cells that express CD206 and CD163 and secrete high levels of IL‐10 and CCL‐18, which is mediated by as yet unidentified MSC‐derived soluble factors. CCL18 proved to be responsible for the observed Treg induction. These data indicate that MSC promote the generation of Tregs. Both the direct pathway through the constitutive production of TGF‐β1 and the indirect novel pathway involving the differentiation of monocytes toward CCL18 producing type 2 macrophages are essential for the generation of Tregs induced by MSC. Stem Cells 2013;31:1980‐1991


Molecular Therapy | 2011

Lentiviral Vector Design and Imaging Approaches to Visualize the Early Stages of Cellular Reprogramming

Eva Warlich; Johannes Kuehle; Tobias Cantz; Martijn H. Brugman; Tobias Maetzig; Melanie Galla; Adam Filipczyk; Stephan Halle; Hannes Klump; Hans R. Schöler; Christopher Baum; Timm Schroeder; Axel Schambach

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) can be derived from somatic cells by gene transfer of reprogramming transcription factors. Expression levels of these factors strongly influence the overall efficacy to form iPSC colonies, but additional contribution of stochastic cell-intrinsic factors has been proposed. Here, we present engineered color-coded lentiviral vectors in which codon-optimized reprogramming factors are co-expressed by a strong retroviral promoter that is rapidly silenced in iPSC, and imaged the conversion of fibroblasts to iPSC. We combined fluorescence microscopy with long-term single cell tracking, and used live-cell imaging to analyze the emergence and composition of early iPSC clusters. Applying our engineered lentiviral vectors, we demonstrate that vector silencing typically occurs prior to or simultaneously with the induction of an Oct4-EGFP pluripotency marker. Around 7 days post-transduction (pt), a subfraction of cells in clonal colonies expressed Oct4-EGFP and rapidly expanded. Cell tracking of single cell-derived iPSC colonies supported the concept that stochastic epigenetic changes are necessary for reprogramming. We also found that iPSC colonies may emerge as a genetic mosaic originating from different clusters. Improved vector design with continuous cell tracking thus creates a powerful system to explore the subtle dynamics of biological processes such as early reprogramming events.


Leukemia | 2012

Wnt signaling strength regulates normal hematopoiesis and its deregulation is involved in leukemia development

Tiago C. Luis; Michiko Ichii; Martijn H. Brugman; Paul W. Kincade; Frank J. T. Staal

A strict balance between self-renewal and differentiation of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is required in order to maintain homeostasis, as well as to efficiently respond to injury and infections. Numbers and fate decisions made by progenitors derived from HSC must also be carefully regulated to sustain large-scale production of blood cells. The complex Wnt family of molecules generally is thought to be important to these processes, delivering critical signals to HSC and progenitors as they reside in specialized niches. Wnt proteins have also been extensively studied in connection with malignancies and are causatively involved in the development of several types of leukemias. However, studies with experimental animal models have produced contradictory findings regarding the importance of Wnt signals for normal hematopoiesis and lymphopoiesis. Here, we will argue that dose dependency of signaling via particular Wnt pathways accounts for much, if not all of this controversy. We conclude that there seems little doubt that Wnt proteins are required to sustain normal hematopoiesis, but are likely to be presented in carefully controlled gradients in a tissue-specific manner.


Leukemia | 2008

Leukemia induction after a single retroviral vector insertion in Evi1 or Prdm16

Ute Modlich; Axel Schambach; Martijn H. Brugman; Daniel C. Wicke; Sabine Knoess; Zhixiong Li; Tobias Maetzig; Cornelia Rudolph; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Christopher Baum

Insertional activation of cellular proto-oncogenes by replication-defective retroviral vectors can trigger clonal dominance and leukemogenesis in animal models and clinical trials. Here, we addressed the leukemogenic potential of vectors expressing interleukin-2 receptor common γ-chain (IL2RG), the coding sequence required for correction of X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency. Similar to conventional γ-retroviral vectors, self-inactivating (SIN) vectors with strong internal enhancers also triggered profound clonal imbalance, yet with a characteristic insertion preference for a window located downstream of the transcriptional start site. Controls including lentivirally transduced cells revealed that ectopic IL2RG expression was not sufficient to trigger leukemia. After serial bone marrow transplantation involving 106 C57Bl6/J mice monitored for up to 18 months, we observed leukemic progression of six distinct clones harboring γ-retroviral long terminal repeat (LTR) or SIN vector insertions in Evi1 or Prdm16, two functionally related genes. Three leukemic clones had single vector integrations, and identical clones manifested with a remarkably similar latency and phenotype in independent recipients. We conclude that upregulation of Evi1 or Prdm16 was sufficient to initiate a leukemogenic cascade with consistent intrinsic dynamics. Our study also shows that insertional mutagenesis is required for leukemia induction by IL2RG vectors, a risk to be addressed by improved vector design.


Genome Research | 2014

Somatic mutations found in the healthy blood compartment of a 115-yr-old woman demonstrate oligoclonal hematopoiesis

Henne Holstege; Wayne Pfeiffer; Daoud Sie; Marc Hulsman; Thomas J. Nicholas; Clarence Lee; Tristen Ross; Jue Lin; Mark A. Miller; Bauke Ylstra; Hanne Meijers-Heijboer; Martijn H. Brugman; Frank J. T. Staal; Gert Holstege; Marcel J. T. Reinders; Timothy T. Harkins; Samuel Levy; Erik A. Sistermans

The somatic mutation burden in healthy white blood cells (WBCs) is not well known. Based on deep whole-genome sequencing, we estimate that approximately 450 somatic mutations accumulated in the nonrepetitive genome within the healthy blood compartment of a 115-yr-old woman. The detected mutations appear to have been harmless passenger mutations: They were enriched in noncoding, AT-rich regions that are not evolutionarily conserved, and they were depleted for genomic elements where mutations might have favorable or adverse effects on cellular fitness, such as regions with actively transcribed genes. The distribution of variant allele frequencies of these mutations suggests that the majority of the peripheral white blood cells were offspring of two related hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) clones. Moreover, telomere lengths of the WBCs were significantly shorter than telomere lengths from other tissues. Together, this suggests that the finite lifespan of HSCs, rather than somatic mutation effects, may lead to hematopoietic clonal evolution at extreme ages.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2012

Next-generation sequencing for minimal residual disease monitoring in acute myeloid leukemia patients with FLT3-ITD or NPM1 mutations.

Felicitas Thol; Britta Kölking; Frederik Damm; Katarina Reinhardt; Jan-Henning Klusmann; Dirk Reinhardt; Nils von Neuhoff; Martijn H. Brugman; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Sebastian Suerbaum; Jürgen Krauter; Arnold Ganser; Michael Heuser

Systematic assessment of minimal residual disease (MRD) in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients has been hampered by lack of a reliable, uniform MRD marker applicable to all patients. We evaluated next‐generation sequencing (NGS) for MRD assessment in AML patients (n = 80 samples). The ability of NGS technologies to generate thousands of clonal sequences makes it possible to determine the allelic ratio of sequence variants. Using NGS, we were able to determine the allelic ratio of different FLT3‐internal tandem duplication (ITD) clones within one patient sample, in addition to resolution of FLT3‐ITD insertion site, length, and sequence in a single analysis. Furthermore, NGS allowed us to study emergence of clonal dominance. Parallel assessment of MRD by NGS and quantitative real‐time polymerase chain reaction in NPM1 mutated patients was concordant in 95% of analyzed samples (n = 38). The frequency of mutated alleles was linearly quantified by NGS. As NGS sensitivity is scalable depending on sequence coverage, it reflects a highly flexible and reliable tool to assess MRD in leukemia patients.


Leukemia | 2007

Ectopic retroviral expression of LMO2, but not IL2Rγ, blocks human T-cell development from CD34+ cells: Implications for leukemogenesis in gene therapy

Karin Pike-Overzet; Dick de Ridder; Floor Weerkamp; Miranda R. M. Baert; Monique M.A. Verstegen; Martijn H. Brugman; Steven J. Howe; Marcel J. T. Reinders; Adrian J. Thrasher; Gerard Wagemaker; J J M van Dongen; Frank Jakob Theodor Staal

The occurrence of leukemia in a gene therapy trial for SCID-X1 has highlighted insertional mutagenesis as an adverse effect. Although retroviral integration near the T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) oncogene LIM-only protein 2 (LMO2) appears to be a common event, it is unclear why LMO2 was preferentially targeted. We show that of classical T-ALL oncogenes, LMO2 is most highly transcribed in CD34+ progenitor cells. Upon stimulation with growth factors typically used in gene therapy protocols transcription of LMO2, LYL1, TAL1 and TAN1 is most prominent. Therefore, these oncogenes may be susceptible to viral integration. The interleukin-2 receptor gamma chain (IL2Rγ), which is mutated in SCID-X1, has been proposed as a cooperating oncogene to LMO2. However, we found that overexpressing IL2Rγ had no effect on T-cell development. In contrast, retroviral overexpression of LMO2 in CD34+ cells caused severe abnormalities in T-cell development, but B-cell and myeloid development remained unaffected. Our data help explain why LMO2 was preferentially targeted over many of the other known T-ALL oncogenes. Furthermore, during T-cell development retrovirus-mediated expression of IL2Rγ may not be directly oncogenic. Instead, restoration of normal IL7-receptor signaling may allow progression of T-cell development to stages where ectopic LMO2 expression causes aberrant thymocyte growth.

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Frank J. T. Staal

Leiden University Medical Center

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Gerard Wagemaker

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Karin Pike-Overzet

Leiden University Medical Center

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Zhixiong Li

Hannover Medical School

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Ute Modlich

Hannover Medical School

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Dick de Ridder

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Steven J. Howe

University College London

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