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Dive into the research topics where Sophie Smolders is active.

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Featured researches published by Sophie Smolders.


Glia | 2013

Complex invasion pattern of the cerebral cortex bymicroglial cells during development of the mouse embryo.

Nina Swinnen; Sophie Smolders; Ariel Avila; Kristof Notelaers; Rik Paesen; Marcel Ameloot; Bert Brône; Pascal Legendre; Jean-Michel Rigo

Microglia are the immune cells of the central nervous system. They are suspected to play important roles in adult synaptogenesis and in the development of the neuronal network. Microglial cells originate from progenitors in the yolk sac. Although it was suggested that they invade the cortex at early developmental stages in the embryo, their invasion pattern remains largely unknown. To address this issue we analyzed the pattern of cortical invasion by microglial cells in mouse embryos at the onset of neuronal cell migration using in vivo immunohistochemistry and ex vivo time‐lapse analysis of microglial cells. Microglial cells begin to invade the cortex at 11.5 days of embryonic age (E11.5). They first accumulate at the pial surface and within the lateral ventricles, after which they spread throughout the cortical wall, avoiding the cortical plate region in later embryonic ages. The invasion of the cortical parenchyma occurs in different phases. First, there is a gradual increase of microglial cells between E10.5 and E14.5. From E14.5 to E15.5 there is a rapid phase with a massive increase in microglia, followed by a slow phase again from E15.5 until E17.5. At early stages, many peripheral microglia are actively proliferating before entering the parenchyma. Remarkably, activated microglia accumulate in the choroid plexus primordium, where they are in the proximity of dying cells. Time‐lapse analysis shows that embryonic microglia are highly dynamic cells.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2015

Maternal immune activation evoked by polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid does not evoke microglial cell activation in the embryo

Silke Smolders; Sophie Smolders; Nina Swinnen; Annette Gärtner; Jean-Michel Rigo; Pascal Legendre; Bert Brône

Several studies have indicated that inflammation during pregnancy increases the risk for the development of neuropsychiatric disorders in the offspring. Morphological brain abnormalities combined with deviations in the inflammatory status of the brain can be observed in patients of both autism and schizophrenia. It was shown that acute infection can induce changes in maternal cytokine levels which in turn are suggested to affect fetal brain development and increase the risk on the development of neuropsychiatric disorders in the offspring. Animal models of maternal immune activation reproduce the etiology of neurodevelopmental disorders such as schizophrenia and autism. In this study the poly (I:C) model was used to mimic viral immune activation in pregnant mice in order to assess the activation status of fetal microglia in these developmental disorders. Because microglia are the resident immune cells of the brain they were expected to be activated due to the inflammatory stimulus. Microglial cell density and activation level in the fetal cortex and hippocampus were determined. Despite the presence of a systemic inflammation in the pregnant mice, there was no significant difference in fetal microglial cell density or immunohistochemically determined activation level between the control and inflammation group. These data indicate that activation of the fetal microglial cells is not likely to be responsible for the inflammation induced deficits in the offspring in this model.


Glia | 2017

Age‐specific function of α5β1 integrin in microglial migration during early colonization of the developing mouse cortex

Sophie Smolders; Nina Swinnen; Sofie Kessels; Kaline Arnauts; Silke Smolders; Barbara Le Bras; Jean-Michel Rigo; Pascal Legendre; Bert Brône

Microglia, the immune cells of the central nervous system, take part in brain development and homeostasis. They derive from primitive myeloid progenitors that originate in the yolk sac and colonize the brain mainly through intensive migration. During development, microglial migration speed declines which suggests that their interaction with the microenvironment changes. However, the matrix–cell interactions allowing dispersion within the parenchyma are unknown. Therefore, we aimed to better characterize the migration behavior and to assess the role of matrix–integrin interactions during microglial migration in the embryonic brain ex vivo. We focused on microglia–fibronectin interactions mediated through the fibronectin receptor α5β1 integrin because in vitro work indirectly suggested a role for this ligand–receptor pair. Using 2‐photon time‐lapse microscopy on acute ex vivo embryonic brain slices, we found that migration occurs in a saltatory pattern and is developmentally regulated. Most importantly, there is an age‐specific function of the α5β1 integrin during microglial cortex colonization. At embryonic day (E) 13.5, α5β1 facilitates migration while from E15.5, it inhibits migration. These results indicate a developmentally regulated function of α5β1 integrin in microglial migration during colonization of the embryonic brain.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2018

Magnetofection is superior to other chemical transfection methods in a microglial cell line

Silke Smolders; Sofie Kessels; Sophie Smolders; Florent Poulhes; Olivier Zelphati; Cédric Sapet; Bert Brône

BACKGROUND Microglia, the resident phagocytic cells of the brain, have recently been the subject of intense investigation given their role in pathology and normal brain physiology. In general, phagocytic cells are hard to transfect with plasmid DNA. The BV2 cell line is a murine cell line of microglial origin which is often used to study this cell type in vitro. Unfortunately, this microglial cell line is, like other phagocytic cells, resistant to transfection. NEW METHOD Magnetofection is a well-established transfection method that combines DNA with magnetic particles which, under the influence of a magnetic field, ensures a high concentration of particles in proximity of cultured cells. Only recently, Glial-Mag was specifically developed for efficient transfection of microglia and microglial cell lines. RESULTS Magnetofection with Glial-Mag yielded a transfection efficiency of 34.95% in BV2 cells, 24h after transfection with an eGFP-expressing plasmid. Efficient gene delivery caused a modest and short-lived cell activation (as measured by IL6 secretion) that ceased by 24h after transfection. COMPARISON WITH EXISTING METHODS Here we show that Glial-Mag magnetofection of BV2 cells yielded a significantly higher transfection efficiency (34.95%) compared to other chemical transfection methods including calcium-phoshate precipication (0.34%), X-tremeGENE (3.30%) and Lipofectamine 2000 (12.51%). CONCLUSION Transfection of BV2 cells using Glial-Mag magnetofection is superior compared to other chemical transfection methods and could be considered as the method of choice to chemically transfect microglial cell lines.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2018

Controversies and prospects about microglia in maternal immune activation models for neurodevelopmental disorders

Silke Smolders; Tina Notter; Sophie Smolders; Jean-Michel Rigo; Bert Brône

Activation of the maternal immune system during pregnancy is a well-established risk factor for neuropsychiatric disease in the offspring, yet, the underlying mechanisms leading to altered brain function remain largely undefined. Microglia, the resident immune cells of the brain, are key to adequate development of the central nervous system (CNS), and are prime candidates to mediate maternal immune activation (MIA)-induced brain abnormalities. As such, the effects of MIA on the immunological phenotype of microglia has been widely investigated. However, contradicting results due to differences in read-out and methodological approaches impede final conclusions on MIA-induced microglial alterations. The aim of this review is to critically discuss the evidence for an activated microglial phenotype upon MIA.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2016

Fully automated muscle quality assessment by Gabor filtering of second harmonic generation images

Rik Paesen; Sophie Smolders; José Manolo de Hoyos Vega; Bert O. Eijnde; Dominique Hansen; Marcel Ameloot

Abstract. Although structural changes on the sarcomere level of skeletal muscle are known to occur due to various pathologies, rigorous studies of the reduced sarcomere quality remain scarce. This can possibly be explained by the lack of an objective tool for analyzing and comparing sarcomere images across biological conditions. Recent developments in second harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy and increasing insight into the interpretation of sarcomere SHG intensity profiles have made SHG microscopy a valuable tool to study microstructural properties of sarcomeres. Typically, sarcomere integrity is analyzed by fitting a set of manually selected, one-dimensional SHG intensity profiles with a supramolecular SHG model. To circumvent this tedious manual selection step, we developed a fully automated image analysis procedure to map the sarcomere disorder for the entire image at once. The algorithm relies on a single-frequency wavelet-based Gabor approach and includes a newly developed normalization procedure allowing for unambiguous data interpretation. The method was validated by showing the correlation between the sarcomere disorder, quantified by the M-band size obtained from manually selected profiles, and the normalized Gabor value ranging from 0 to 1 for decreasing disorder. Finally, to elucidate the applicability of our newly developed protocol, Gabor analysis was used to study the effect of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis on the sarcomere regularity. We believe that the technique developed in this work holds great promise for high-throughput, unbiased, and automated image analysis to study sarcomere integrity by SHG microscopy.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2015

On the interpretation of second harmonic generation intensity profiles of striated muscle

Rik Paesen; Sophie Smolders; Inez Wens; Kristof Notelaers; José Manolo de Hoyos Vega; Virginie Bito; Bert O. Eijnde; Dominique Hansen; Marcel Ameloot

Abstract. Recently, a supramolecular model was developed for predicting striated skeletal muscle intensity profiles obtained by label-free second harmonic generation (SHG) microscopy. This model allows for a quantitative determination of the length of the thick filament antiparallel range or M-band (M), and results in M=0.12  μm for single-band intensity profiles when fixing the A-band length (A) to A=1.6  μm, a value originating from electron microscopy (EM) observations. Using simulations and experimental data sets, we showed that the objective numerical aperture (NA) and the refractive index (RI) mismatch (Δn=n2ω−nω) between the illumination wave (ω) and the second harmonic wave (2ω) severely affect the simulated sarcomere intensity profiles. Therefore, our recovered filament lengths did not match with those observed by EM. For an RI mismatch of Δn=0.02 and a moderate illumination NA of 0.8, analysis of single-band SHG intensity profiles with freely adjustable A- and M-band sizes yielded A=1.40±0.04  μm and M=0.07±0.05  μm for skeletal muscle. These lower than expected values were rationalized in terms of the myosin density distribution along the myosin thick filament axis. Our data provided new and practical insights for the application of the supramolecular model to study SHG intensity profiles in striated muscle.


International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience | 2015

Embryonic microglia are not activated during maternal immune activation in mice

Bert Brône; Silke Smolders; Sophie Smolders; Nina Swinnen; P. Legendre; Jean Michel Rigo

[Brone, Bert; Smolders, Silke; Smolders, Sophie; Swinnen, Nina; Rigo, Jean-Michel] Hasselt Univ, BIOMED, Agoralaan Gebouw C, B-3590 Diepenbeek, Belgium. [Swinnen, Nina; Legendre, Pascal] Univ Paris 06, INSERM, U952, Paris, Ile De France, France. [Swinnen, Nina; Legendre, Pascal] Univ Paris 06, CNRS, UMR 7224, Paris, Ile De France, France. [Swinnen, Nina; Legendre, Pascal] Univ Paris 06, Paris, Ile De France, France.


Archive | 2017

Efficient transfection of a microglia cell line using magnetofection

Sofie Kessels; Silke Smolders; Sophie Smolders; Florent Poulhes; Olivier Zelphati; Cédric Sapet; Bert Brône


Archive | 2017

Microglial integrins switch jobs during cortical development

Sophie Smolders; Nina Swinnen; K. Arnauts; B. Le Bras; Jean-Michel Rigo; P. Legendre; Bert Brône

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Marcel Ameloot

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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