Wolf Korper
University of Amsterdam
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Wolf Korper.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2002
Vincent Everts; J. M. Delaisse; Wolf Korper; D. C. Jansen; Wikky Tigchelaar-Gutter; Paul Saftig; W. Beertsen
In this study we investigated the role of bone lining cells in the coordination of bone resorption and formation. Ultrastructural analysis of mouse long bones and calvariae revealed that bone lining cells enwrap and subsequently digest collagen fibrils protruding from Howships lacunae that are left by osteoclasts. By using selective proteinase inhibitors we show that this digestion depends on matrix metalloproteinases and, to some extent, on serine proteinases. Autoradiography revealed that after the bone lining cells have finished cleaning, they deposit a thin layer of a collagenous matrix along the Howships lacuna, in close association with an osteopontin‐rich cement line. Collagenous matrix deposition was detected only in completely cleaned pits. In bone from pycnodysostotic patients and cathepsin K‐deficient mice, conditions in which osteoclastic bone matrix digestion is greatly inhibited, bone matrix leftovers proved to be degraded by bone lining cells, thus indicating that the bone lining cell “rescues” bone remodeling in these anomalies. We conclude that removal of bone collagen left by osteoclasts in Howships lacunae is an obligatory step in the link between bone resorption and formation, and that bone lining cells and matrix metalloproteinases are essential in this process.
The FASEB Journal | 1999
Vincent Everts; Wolf Korper; D. C. Jansen; J. Steinfort; I. Lammerse; S. Heera; Andrew J. P. Docherty; Wouter Beertsen
Data in the literature suggest that site‐specific differences exist in the skeleton with respect to digestion of bone by osteoclasts. Therefore, we investigated whether bone resorption by calvarial osteoclasts (intramembranous bone) differs from resorption by long bone osteoclasts (endochondral bone). The involvement of two major classes of proteolytic enzymes, the cysteine proteinases (CPs) and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), was studied by analyzing the effects of selective low molecular weight inhibitors of these enzymes on bone resorption. Mouse tissue explants (calvariae and long bones) as well as rabbit osteoclasts, which had been isolated from both skeletal sites and subsequently seeded on bone slices, were cultured in the presence of inhibitors and resorption was analyzed. The activity of the CP cathepsins B and K and of MMPs was determined biochemically (CPs and MMPs) and enzyme histochemically (CPs) in explants and isolated osteoclasts. We show that osteoclastic resorption of calvarial bone depends on activity of both CPs and MMPs, whereas long bone resorption depends on CPs, but not on the activity of MMPs. Furthermore, significantly higher levels of cathepsin B and cathepsin K activities were expressed by long bone osteoclasts than by calvarial osteoclasts. Resorption of slices of bovine skull or cortical bone by osteoclasts isolated from long bones was not affected by MMP inhibitors, whereas resorption by calvarial osteoclasts was inhibited. Inhibition of CP activity affected the resorption by the two populations of osteoclasts in a similar way. We conclude that this is the first report to show that significant differences exist between osteoclasts of calvariae and long bones with respect to their bone resorbing activities. Resorption by calvarial osteoclasts depends on the activity of CPs and MMPs, whereas resorption by long bone osteoclasts depends primarily on the activity of CPs. We hypothesize that functionally different subpopulations of osteoclasts, such as those described here, originate from different sets of progenitors.—Everts, V., Korper, W., Jansen, D. C., Steinfort, J., Lammerse, I., Heera, S., Docherty, A. J. P., Beertsen, W. Functional heterogeneity of osteoclasts: matrix metalloproteinases participate in osteoclastic resorption of calvarial bone but not in resorption of long bone. FASEB J. 13, 1219–1230 (1999)
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2006
Vincent Everts; Wolf Korper; Kees A. Hoeben; Ineke D. C. Jansen; Dieter Brömme; Kitty B. J. M. Cleutjens; Sylvia Heeneman; Christoph Peters; Thomas Reinheckel; Paul Saftig; Wouter Beertsen
Osteoclastic bone degradation involves the activity of cathepsin K. We found that in addition to this enzyme other, yet unknown, cysteine proteinases participate in digestion. The results support the notion that osteoclasts from different bone sites use different enzymes to degrade the collagenous bone matrix.
Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 1998
Vincent Everts; Jean-Marie Delaissé; Wolf Korper; Wouter Beertsen
Digestion of calvarial bone by osteoclasts depends on the activity of cysteine proteinases and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). It is unknown, however, whether these enzymes act simultaneously or in a certain (time) sequence. In the present study, this was investigated by culturing mouse calvarial bone explants for various time intervals in the presence or absence of selective low molecular weight inhibitors of cysteine proteinases (E‐64, Z‐Phe‐Tyr(O‐t‐Bu)CHN2 or CA074[Me]) and MMPs (CI‐1, CT1166, or RP59794). The explants were morphometrically analyzed at the electron microscopic level. All proteinase inhibitors induced large areas of nondigested demineralized bone matrix adjacent to the ruffled border of actively resorbing osteoclasts. The appearance of these areas proved to be time dependent. In the presence of the cysteine proteinase inhibitors, a maximal surface area of demineralized bone was seen between 4 and 8 h of culturing, whereas the metalloproteinase inhibitors had their maximal effect at a later time interval (between 16 and 24 h). Because different inhibitors of each of the two classes of proteolytic enzymes had the same effects, our data strongly suggest that cysteine proteinases attack the bone matrix prior to digestion by MMPs. In line with the view that a sequence may exist were differences in the amount of proteoglycans (shown with the selective dye cuprolinic blue) in the subosteoclastic demineralized areas induced by the inhibitors. In the presence of the cysteine proteinase inhibitor, relatively high levels of cuprolinic blue precipitates were found, whereas this was less following inhibition of metalloproteinases. These data suggested that cysteine proteinases are important for digestion of noncollagenous proteins. We propose the following sequence in the digestion of calvarial bone by osteoclasts: after attachment of the cell to the mineralized surface an area with a low pH is created which results in dissolution of the mineral, then cysteine proteinases, active at such a low pH, digest part of the bone matrix, and finally, when the pH has increased somewhat, MMPs exert their activity.
Matrix Biology | 1995
Vincent Everts; Wolf Korper; Anneke Niehof; Ineke D. C. Jansen; Wouter Beertsen
Type VI collagen is present in most connective tissues, where it is considered to play a crucial role in the attachment of cells to the extracellular matrix and/or in the three-dimensional organization of the collagen meshwork. Although some information is available on its formation, the mechanisms involved in its degradation are not understood. Here, we present evidence for lysosomal digestion of type VI collagen by fibroblasts of periosteal explants. In the lysosomal apparatus of these cells, broad-banded filamentous aggregates characterized by 100-nm periodicity were found, which proved to consist of type VI collagen as indicated by their stainability with anti-type VI collagen antibodies. By interfering with synthesis (ascorbate or alpha, alpha-dipyridyl), intracellular translocation of collagen-containing vesicles (colchicine) as well as phagocytosis (cytochalasin B), it was shown that the intracellular broad-banded type VI collagen represented phagocytosed material. In the presence of acidotropic agents (NH4Cl and methylamine) the amount of intracellular type VI collagen increased significantly (5- to 10-fold), suggesting that a rise of pH in the endosomal/lysosomal apparatus causes inhibition of its degradation. By using a variety of proteinase inhibitors, it was found that inhibition of collagenase (when used in combination with NH4Cl), or inhibition of cysteine proteinases (both with and without NH4Cl), resulted in an increased amount of intracellular type VI collagen, whereas inhibition of serine proteinases significantly lowered the level of intracellular type VI collagen. The data presented are the first to indicate a pathway by which type VI collagen degradation may occur: fibroblasts phagocytose type VI collagen and subsequently digest this collagen in their lysosomal apparatus. Degradation depends on the activity of several enzymes, among them collagenase and serine proteinases, probably exerting their activity in the extracellular space just before the actual internalization. After uptake, digestion involves pH-sensitive lysosomal enzymes, including those belonging to the class of cysteine proteinases.
Ultrastructural Pathology | 1993
Ilse M. C. Vogels; Cornelis J. F. Van Noorden; Kees A. Hoeben; Wolf Korper; N. Jonges Geertruida; Vincent Everts
A simple and rapid method that enables the use of unfixed frozen material for light and electron microscopic purposes is described. At the light microscopic (LM) level, unfixed cryostat sections were used for enzyme histochemistry. When electron microscopic (EM) inspection was needed, tissue blocks, which were stored at -80 degrees C, were fixed at 4 degrees C and prepared for EM according to standard procedures. Ultrastructural analysis of this material demonstrated that most morphologic aspects of normal (human pancreas and rat liver) and pathologic (human pancreatic adenocarcinoma and rat colon carcinoma metastases in liver) tissue were rather well retained. Cryostat sectioning at -25 degrees C did not appear to have damaging effects on the morphology. The method was applied to correlate enzyme histochemical (LM) data with ultrastructural (EM) aspects of mineralization of stroma in explants of human pancreatic adenocarcinoma grown in nude mice and of nonparenchymal cells around metastases of colon carcinoma in rat liver.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1999
Vincent Everts; Wolf Korper; Andrew J. P. Docherty; W. Beertsen
It is generally accepted that cysteine proteinases (CPs) play an essential role in the degradation of bone matrix by osteoclasts. With respect to another class of proteinases, the matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), contradictory results have been presented. 1,2 Since in these studies osteoclasts from different bone types were used, we hypothesized that functional differences exist between osteoclasts that occupy different sites of the body. In this study we compared osteoclastic bone degradation of calvarial and long bones and analyzed (i) the effect of selective CPand MMPinhibitors, and (ii) the resorption of bone slices by isolated calvarial and long bone osteoclasts and the effect of proteinase inhibitors thereupon.
Journal of Cellular Physiology | 1992
Vincent Everts; Jean-Marie Delaissé; Wolf Korper; Anneke Niehof; Gilbert Vaes; Wouter Beertsen
Geopolitics | 2002
Vincent Everts; Jean-Marie Delaissé; Wolf Korper; Paul Saftig; W. Beertsen
Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology | 1999
Vincent Everts; Wolf Korper; D. C. Jansen; J. Steinfort; I. Lammerse; Shobba Heera; Andrew J. P. Docherty; Wouter Beertsen