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Dive into the research topics where Rolf G. Boot is active.

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Featured researches published by Rolf G. Boot.


Annals of Hematology | 2008

Immunoglobulin and free light chain abnormalities in Gaucher disease type I: data from an adult cohort of 63 patients and review of the literature

M. de Fost; T. A. Out; F. A. de Wilde; Esther P. M. Tjin; Steven T. Pals; M. H. J. Van Oers; Rolf G. Boot; Johannes M. Aerts; Mario Maas; S. vom Dahl; C. E. M. Hollak

Gaucher disease type I, the most common lysosomal storage disorder, is associated with immunoglobulin abnormalities. We studied the prevalence, risk factors, pathogenesis, and effect of enzyme relation therapy (ERT) on gammopathies in an adult Gaucher disease type I cohort (Nu2009=u200963) and related the results to a review of the currently available literature. Polyclonal gammopathies and monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) in our adult GD I cohort were found in 41% and 19% of patients. These results are similar to the data from the literature and correspond to the increased risk of multiple myeloma (MM) that has been described. The prevalence of MGUS in our cohort increased with age but was not associated with disease severity or exposure time. The serum levels of free light chains of immunoglobulins were measured and were not found predictive for the development of MGUS or MM. Levels of pro- as well as anti-inflammatory cytokines, growth factors, and chemokines, especially those involved in inflammation and B-cell function, are disturbed in GD I, with the most impressive and consisting elevations for interleukin-10 and pulmonary and activation-regulated chemokine. A beneficial effect of ERT on the occurrence and progression of gammopathies was suggested from longitudinal data.


Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs | 2010

Pharmacological small molecules for the treatment of lysosomal storage disorders

Bouwien E. Smid; Johannes M. F. G. Aerts; Rolf G. Boot; Gabor E. Linthorst; C. E. M. Hollak

Importance of the field: Inherited lysosomal storage diseases often cause severe disability and have a devastating effect on quality of life. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) forms a cornerstone in the treatment of lysosomal enzyme deficiencies. Although for some lysosomal disorders ERT is lifesaving, important intrinsic restrictions of the approach are limited access of infused enzyme to less accessible body compartments such as theCNS, the burden of frequent intravenous administration, the emergence of antibodies and the high associated costs. Pharmacological small molecules may overcome these limitations. Areas covered in this review: Several novel therapeutic approaches using small molecules are emerging: substrate reduction therapy, pharmacological chaperone therapy, premature nonsense mutation suppressors and proteostasis regulators. What the reader will gain: Based on an extensive literature search up until June 2010, we here review the various therapeutic approaches with small compounds, including those currently in clinical use and those that have entered clinical trials. Compounds that are still in the preclinical phase are also briefly discussed. Take home message: pharmacological small molecules are a new class of agents that show great promise for the treatment of lysosomal storage disorders.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2016

Increased YKL-40 and Chitotriosidase in Asthma and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Anna James; Lovisa E. Reinius; Marri Verhoek; Anna Gomes; Maciej Kupczyk; Ulf Hammar; Junya Ono; Shoichiro Ohta; Kenji Izuhara; Elisabeth H. Bel; Juha Kere; Cilla Söderhäll; Barbro Dahlén; Rolf G. Boot; Sven-Erik Dahlén

RATIONALEnSerum chitinases may be novel biomarkers of airway inflammation and remodeling, but less is known about factors regulating their levels.nnnOBJECTIVESnTo examine serum chitotriosidase activity and YKL-40 levels in patients with asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and evaluate clinically relevant factors that may affect chitinase levels, including genetic variability, corticosteroid treatment, disease exacerbations, and allergen exposure.nnnMETHODSnSerum chitotriosidase (CHIT1) activity and YKL-40 (CHI3L1) levels, as well as the CHIT1 rs3831317 and CHI3L1 rs4950928 genotypes, were examined in subsets of patients with mild to moderate asthma (nu2009=u200976), severe asthma (nu2009=u200993), and COPD (nu2009=u200964) taking part in the European multicenter BIOAIR (Longitudinal Assessment of Clinical Course and Biomarkers in Severe Chronic Airway Disease) study. Blood was obtained at baseline, before and after a 2-week oral steroid intervention, up to six times during a 1-year period, and during exacerbations. Baseline chitinase levels were also measured in 72 healthy control subjects. The effect of allergen inhalation on blood and sputum YKL-40 levels was measured in two separate groups of patients with mild atopic asthma; one group underwent repeated low-dose allergen challenge (nu2009=u200915), and the other underwent high-dose allergen challenge (nu2009=u200916).nnnMEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTSnSerum chitotriosidase and YKL-40 were significantly elevated in patients with asthma and those with COPD compared with healthy control subjects. Genotype and age strongly affected both YKL-40 and chitotriosidase activity, but associations with disease remained following adjustment for these factors. Correlations were observed with lung function but not with other biomarkers, including exhaled nitric oxide, blood eosinophils, periostin, and IgE. Generally, acute exacerbations, allergen-induced airway obstruction, and corticosteroid treatment did not affect circulating chitinase levels.nnnCONCLUSIONSnYKL-40 and chitotriosidase are increased in asthma and more so in COPD. The data in the present study support these substances as being relatively steroid-insensitive, non-T-helper cell type 2-type biomarkers distinctly related to chronic inflammatory disease processes.


FEBS Letters | 2016

Lysosomal glycosphingolipid catabolism by acid ceramidase: formation of glycosphingoid bases during deficiency of glycosidases

Maria J. Ferraz; André Marques; Monique D. Appelman; Marri Verhoek; Anneke Strijland; Mina Mirzaian; Saskia Scheij; Cécile M. Ouairy; Daniël Lahav; Patrick Wisse; Herman S. Overkleeft; Rolf G. Boot; Johannes M. F. G. Aerts

Glycosphingoid bases are elevated in inherited lysosomal storage disorders with deficient activity of glycosphingolipid catabolizing glycosidases. We investigated the molecular basis of the formation of glucosylsphingosine and globotriaosylsphingosine during deficiency of glucocerebrosidase (Gaucher disease) and α‐galactosidase A (Fabry disease). Independent genetic and pharmacological evidence is presented pointing to an active role of acid ceramidase in both processes through deacylation of lysosomal glycosphingolipids. The potential pathophysiological relevance of elevated glycosphingoid bases generated through this alternative metabolism in patients suffering from lysosomal glycosidase defects is discussed.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Impact of obesity on taste receptor expression in extra-oral tissues: emphasis on hypothalamus and brainstem.

D. Herrera Moro Chao; Carmen A. Argmann; M. van Eijk; Rolf G. Boot; Roelof Ottenhoff; C. van Roomen; Ewout Foppen; J. E. Siljee; U. A. Unmehopa; Andries Kalsbeek; Johannes M. F. G. Aerts

Sweet perception promotes food intake, whereas that of bitterness is inhibitory. Surprisingly, the expression of sweet G protein-coupled taste receptor (GPCTR) subunits (T1R2 and T1R3) and bitter GPCTRs (T2R116, T2R118, T2R138 and T2R104), as well as the α-subunits of the associated signalling complex (αGustducin, Gα14 and αTransducin), in oral and extra-oral tissues from lean and obese mice, remains poorly characterized. We focused on the impact of obesity on taste receptor expression in brain areas involved in energy homeostasis, namely the hypothalamus and brainstem. We demonstrate that many of the GPCTRs and α-subunits are co-expressed in these tissues and that obesity decreases expression of T1R3, T2R116, Gα14, αTrans and TRPM5. In vitro high levels of glucose caused a prominent down-regulation of T1R2 and Gα14 expression in cultured hypothalamic neuronal cells, leptin caused a transient down-regulation of T1R2 and T1R3 expression. Intriguingly, expression differences were also observed in other extra-oral tissues of lean and obese mice, most strikingly in the duodenum where obesity reduced the expression of most bitter and sweet receptors. In conclusion, obesity influences components of sweet and bitter taste sensing in the duodenum as well as regions of the mouse brain involved in energy homeostasis, including hypothalamus and brainstem.


FEBS Open Bio | 2016

Elevation of glycoprotein nonmetastatic melanoma protein B in type 1 Gaucher disease patients and mouse models

Gertjan Kramer; Wouter Wegdam; Wilma E. Donker-Koopman; Roelof Ottenhoff; Paulo Gaspar; Marri Verhoek; Jessica K. Nelson; Tanit L. Gabriel; Wouter W. Kallemeijn; Rolf G. Boot; Jon D. Laman; Johannes P. C. Vissers; Timothy M. Cox; Elena Pavlova; Mary Teresa Moran; Johannes M. F. G. Aerts; Marco van Eijk

Gaucher disease is caused by inherited deficiency of lysosomal glucocerebrosidase. Proteome analysis of laser‐dissected splenic Gaucher cells revealed increased amounts of glycoprotein nonmetastatic melanoma protein B (gpNMB). Plasma gpNMB was also elevated, correlating with chitotriosidase and CCL18, which are established markers for human Gaucher cells. In Gaucher mice, gpNMB is also produced by Gaucher cells. Correction of glucocerebrosidase deficiency in mice by gene transfer or pharmacological substrate reduction reverses gpNMB abnormalities. In conclusion, gpNMB acts as a marker for glucosylceramide‐laden macrophages in man and mouse and gpNMB should be considered as candidate biomarker for Gaucher disease in treatment monitoring.


Placenta | 2015

Increased glucocerebrosidase expression and activity in preeclamptic placenta

Jiska Jebbink; Rolf G. Boot; Remco Keijser; Perry D. Moerland; Jan Aten; G. J. M. Veenboer; M. van Wely; Maarten Buimer; E. Ver Loren van Themaat; Johannes M. F. G. Aerts; J.A. van der Post; Gijs B. Afink; C. Ris-Stalpers

INTRODUCTIONnLysosomal glucosidase beta acid (GBA) deficiency is inherent to Gaucher disease, Parkinsonism and Lewy-body dementia. Increased GBA expression has never been associated with human disease. We describe increased GBA expression and activity in placenta from preeclamptic pregnancies.nnnMETHODSn112 placenta biopsies were available for qPCR, analysis of GBA gene expression and activity. Microanalysis was performed on 20 placenta samples. Alternatively spliced placental GBA transcripts were cloned, expressed in HEK293 cells and analyzed by Western blot and activity assay.nnnRESULTSnGBA is expressed in the syncytiotrophoblast layer of human placenta already at 5 weeks of gestation. We identified five novel GBA transcripts in placenta that enzymatically inactive when expressed in HEK293 cells. Both GBA RNA expression and enzymatic activity are upregulated in preeclamptic placenta. Microarray analysis of 20 placenta tissues identified 158 genes co-regulating with GBA expression and gene enrichment analysis highlights lysosomal function. In our micro-array data GBA expression does not correlate with FLT1 expression, currently the most powerful marker for preeclampsia. There are 89 transcripts that are negatively correlated with GBA expression of which BMP4 and TFEB are interesting as they are essential to early placenta function.nnnDISCUSSIONnAlthough very speculative, we hypothesize that increased GBA expression might relate to placentation through decreased BMP4 signaling or vascularization through downregulation of TFEB. Ceramide, the product of hydrolysis of glucosylceramide by GBA and involved in the regulation of cell differentiation, survival and apoptosis, is another putative candidate linking increased GBA activity to preeclampsia. Both pathways merit further investigation.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2017

Stabilization of Glucocerebrosidase by Active Site Occupancy

Fredj Ben Bdira; Wouter W. Kallemeijn; Saskia V. Oussoren; Saskia Scheij; Boris Bleijlevens; Bogdan I. Florea; Cindy van Roomen; Roelof Ottenhoff; Marielle J. F. M. van Kooten; Marthe T. C. Walvoort; Martin D. Witte; Rolf G. Boot; Marcellus Ubbink; Herman S. Overkleeft; Johannes M. F. G. Aerts

Glucocerebrosidase (GBA) is a lysosomal β-glucosidase that degrades glucosylceramide. Its deficiency results in Gaucher disease (GD). We examined the effects of active site occupancy of GBA on its structural stability. For this, we made use of cyclophellitol-derived activity-based probes (ABPs) that bind irreversibly to the catalytic nucleophile (E340), and for comparison, we used the potent reversible inhibitor isofagomine. We demonstrate that cyclophellitol ABPs improve the stability of GBA in vitro, as revealed by thermodynamic measurements (Tm increase by 21 °C), and introduce resistance to tryptic digestion. The stabilizing effect of cell-permeable cyclophellitol ABPs is also observed in intact cultured cells containing wild-type GBA, N370S GBA (labile in lysosomes), and L444P GBA (exhibits impaired ER folding): all show marked increases in lysosomal forms of GBA molecules upon exposure to ABPs. The same stabilization effect is observed for endogenous GBA in the liver of wild-type mice injected with cyclophellitol ABPs. Stabilization effects similar to those observed with ABPs were also noted at high concentrations of the reversible inhibitor isofagomine. In conclusion, we provide evidence that the increase in cellular levels of GBA by ABPs and by the reversible inhibitor is in part caused by their ability to stabilize GBA folding, which increases the resistance of GBA against breakdown by lysosomal proteases. These effects are more pronounced in the case of the amphiphilic ABPs, presumably due to their high lipophilic potential, which may promote further structural compactness of GBA through hydrophobic interactions. Our study provides further rationale for the design of chaperones for GBA to ameliorate Gaucher disease.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Investigations on therapeutic glucocerebrosidases through paired detection with fluorescent activity-based probes

Wouter W. Kallemeijn; Saskia Scheij; Sascha Hoogendoorn; Martin D. Witte; Daniela Herrera Moro Chao; Cindy van Roomen; Roelof Ottenhoff; Herman S. Overkleeft; Rolf G. Boot; Johannes M. F. G. Aerts

Deficiency of glucocerebrosidase (GBA) causes Gaucher disease (GD). In the common non-neuronopathic GD type I variant, glucosylceramide accumulates primarily in the lysosomes of visceral macrophages. Supplementing storage cells with lacking enzyme is accomplished via chronic intravenous administration of recombinant GBA containing mannose-terminated N-linked glycans, mediating the selective uptake by macrophages expressing mannose-binding lectin(s). Two recombinant GBA preparations with distinct N-linked glycans are registered in Europe for treatment of type I GD: imiglucerase (Genzyme), contains predominantly Man(3) glycans, and velaglucerase (Shire PLC) Man(9) glycans. Activity-based probes (ABPs) enable fluorescent labeling of recombinant GBA preparations through their covalent attachment to the catalytic nucleophile E340 of GBA. We comparatively studied binding and uptake of ABP-labeled imiglucerase and velaglucerase in isolated dendritic cells, cultured human macrophages and living mice, through simultaneous detection of different GBAs by paired measurements. Uptake of ABP-labeled rGBAs by dendritic cells was comparable, as well as the bio-distribution following equimolar intravenous administration to mice. ABP-labeled rGBAs were recovered largely in liver, white-blood cells, bone marrow and spleen. Lungs, brain and skin, affected tissues in severe GD types II and III, were only poorly supplemented. Small, but significant differences were noted in binding and uptake of rGBAs in cultured human macrophages, in the absence and presence of mannan. Mannan-competed binding and uptake were largest for velaglucerase, when determined with single enzymes or as equimolar mixtures of both enzymes. Vice versa, imiglucerase showed more prominent binding and uptake not competed by mannan. Uptake of recombinant GBAs by cultured macrophages seems to involve multiple receptors, including several mannose-binding lectins. Differences among cells from different donors (n = 12) were noted, but the same trends were always observed. Our study suggests that further insight in targeting and efficacy of enzyme therapy of individual Gaucher patients could be obtained by the use of recombinant GBA, trace-labeled with an ABP, preferably equipped with an infrared fluorophore or other reporter tag suitable for in vivo imaging.


ChemBioChem | 2017

A Specific Activity-Based Probe to Monitor Family GH59 Galactosylceramidase, the Enzyme Deficient in Krabbe Disease.

André Marques; Lianne I. Willems; Daniela Herrera Moro; Bogdan I. Florea; Saskia Scheij; Roelof Ottenhoff; Cindy van Roomen; Marri Verhoek; Jessica K. Nelson; Wouter W. Kallemeijn; Anna Biela-Banas; Olivier R. Martin; M. Begoña Cachón-González; Nee Na Kim; Timothy M. Cox; Rolf G. Boot; Herman S. Overkleeft; Johannes M. F. G. Aerts

Galactosylceramidase (GALC) is the lysosomal β‐galactosidase responsible for the hydrolysis of galactosylceramide. Inherited deficiency in GALC causes Krabbe disease, a devastating neurological disorder characterized by accumulation of galactosylceramide and its deacylated counterpart, the toxic sphingoid base galactosylsphingosine (psychosine). We report the design and application of a fluorescently tagged activity‐based probe (ABP) for the sensitive and specific labeling of active GALC molecules from various species. The probe consists of a β‐galactopyranose‐configured cyclophellitol‐epoxide core, conferring specificity for GALC, equipped with a BODIPY fluorophore at C6 that allows visualization of active enzyme in cells and tissues. Detection of residual GALC in patient fibroblasts holds great promise for laboratory diagnosis of Krabbe disease. We further describe a procedure for in situ imaging of active GALC in murine brain by intra‐cerebroventricular infusion of the ABP. In conclusion, this GALC‐specific ABP should find broad applications in diagnosis, drug development, and evaluation of therapy for Krabbe disease.

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