Myoglobin, encoded by MB, is a small cytoplasmic globular hemoprotein highly expressed in cardiac... more Myoglobin, encoded by MB, is a small cytoplasmic globular hemoprotein highly expressed in cardiac myocytes and oxidative skeletal myofibers. Myoglobin binds O2, facilitates its intracellular transport and serves as a controller of nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species. Here, we identify a recurrent c.292C>T (p.His98Tyr) substitution in MB in fourteen members of six European families suffering from an autosomal dominant progressive myopathy with highly characteristic sarcoplasmic inclusions in skeletal and cardiac muscle. Myoglobinopathy manifests in adulthood with proximal and axial weakness that progresses to involve distal muscles and causes respiratory and cardiac failure. Biochemical characterization reveals that the mutant myoglobin has altered O2 binding, exhibits a faster heme dissociation rate and has a lower reduction potential compared to wild-type myoglobin. Preliminary studies show that mutant myoglobin may result in elevated superoxide levels at the cellular level...
Copy number alterations (CNAs) have increasingly become part of the diagnostic algorithm of glial... more Copy number alterations (CNAs) have increasingly become part of the diagnostic algorithm of glial tumors. Alterations such as homozygous deletion of CDKN2A/B , 7 +/ 10 - chromosome copy number changes or EGFR amplification are predictive of a poor prognosis. The codeletion of chromosome arms 1p and 19q, typically associated with oligodendroglioma, implies a more favorable prognosis. Detection of this codeletion by the current diagnostic standard, being fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), is sometimes however subject to technical and interpretation problems. In this study, we evaluated CNA detection by shallow whole-genome sequencing (sWGS) as an inexpensive, complementary molecular technique. A cohort of 36 glioma tissue samples, enriched with “difficult” and “ambiguous” cases, was analyzed by sWGS. sWGS results were compared with FISH assays of chromosomes 1p and 19q. In addition, CNAs relevant to glioblastoma diagnosis were explored. In 4/36 samples, EGFR (7p11.2) amplifications and homozygous loss of CDKN2A/B were identified by sWGS. Six out of 8 IDH –wild-type glioblastomas demonstrated a prognostic chromosome 7/chromosome 10 signature. In 11/36 samples, local interstitial and terminal 1p/19q alterations were detected by sWGS, implying that FISH’s targeted nature might promote false arm–level extrapolations. In this cohort, differences in overall survival between patients with and without codeletion were better pronounced by the sequencing-based distinction (likelihood ratio of 7.48) in comparison to FISH groupings (likelihood ratio of 0.97 at diagnosis and 1.79 ± 0.62 at reobservation), suggesting sWGS is more accurate than FISH. We recognized adverse effects of tissue block age on FISH signals. In addition, we show how sWGS reveals relevant aberrations beyond the 1p/19q state, such as EGFR amplification, combined gain of chromosome 7 and loss of chromosome 10, and homozygous loss of CDKN2A/B . The findings presented by this study might stimulate implementation of sWGS as a complementary, easy to apply technique for copy number detection.
Background Minimally invasive autopsy (MIA) is a validated and safe method to establish the cause... more Background Minimally invasive autopsy (MIA) is a validated and safe method to establish the cause of death (COD), mainly in low-resource settings. However, the additional clinical value of MIA in Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patients in a high-resource setting is unknown. The objective was to assess if and how MIA changed clinical COD and contributing diagnoses in deceased COVID-19 patients. Methods and findings A prospective observational cohort from April to May 2020 in a 981-bed teaching hospital in the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic in Belgium was established. Patients who died with either PCR-confirmed or radiologically confirmed COVID-19 infection were consecutively included. MIA consisted of whole-body CT and CT-guided Tru-Cut® biopsies. Diagnostic modalities were clinical chart review, radiology, microbiology, and histopathology which were assessed by two independent experts per modality. MIA COD and contributing diagnoses were established during a multi-disciplinary m...
e18028 Background: Conventional treatments for cervical cancer (CC) have reached a plateau and on... more e18028 Background: Conventional treatments for cervical cancer (CC) have reached a plateau and only limited progress for targeted therapy has been made over the last decades, resulting in a meager five-year survival rate of only 17% for the advanced stages. To improve long-term benefits for the patient, a promising hot field of research in oncology that opens new perspectives is immunotherapy. Even though CC has shown to be immunogenic, only a minority of patients respond to this type of treatment. In recent years, the RANKL/RANK signaling pathway has been implicated as a key immune modulating factor in the tumor microenvironment, allowing the cancer cells to evade the immune response by disrupting the immune-intrinsic crosstalk. Both RANKL and RANK are highly co-expressed in CC, which correlates with inferior clinicopathological parameters and an increased risk of death. Targeting this pathway may therefore be of great value in the treatment of CC and the quest to release the brake...
Journal of Neuropathology & Experimental Neurology, 2019
Nodding syndrome (NS) is an epileptic disorder occurring in children in African onchocerciasis en... more Nodding syndrome (NS) is an epileptic disorder occurring in children in African onchocerciasis endemic regions. Here, we describe the pathological changes in 9 individuals from northern Uganda who died with NS (n = 5) or other forms of onchocerciasis-associated epilepsy (OAE) (n = 4). Postmortem examinations were performed and clinical information was obtained. Formalin-fixed brain samples were stained by hematoxylin and eosin and immunohistochemistry was used to stain astrocytes (GFAP), macrophages (CD68), ubiquitin, α-synuclein, p62, TDP-43, amyloid β, and tau (AT8). The cerebellum showed atrophy and loss of Purkinje cells with hyperplasia of the Bergmann glia. Gliosis and features of past ventriculitis and/or meningitis were observed in all but 1 participant. CD68-positive macrophage clusters were observed in all cases in various degrees. Immunohistochemistry for amyloid β, α-synuclein, or TDP-43 was negative. Mild to sparse AT8-positive neurofibrillary tangle-like structures and...
Intra-amniotic Candida albicans (C. Albicans) infection is associated with preterm birth and high... more Intra-amniotic Candida albicans (C. Albicans) infection is associated with preterm birth and high morbidity and mortality rates. Survivors are prone to adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes. The mechanisms leading to these adverse neonatal brain outcomes remain largely unknown. To better understand the mechanisms underlying C. albicans-induced fetal brain injury, we studied immunological responses and structural changes of the fetal brain in a well-established translational ovine model of intra-amniotic C. albicans infection. In addition, we tested whether these potential adverse outcomes of the fetal brain were improved in utero by antifungal treatment with fluconazole. Pregnant ewes received an intra-amniotic injection of 10(7) colony-forming units C. albicans or saline (controls) at 3 or 5 days before preterm delivery at 0.8 of gestation (term ~ 150 days). Fetal intra-amniotic/intra-peritoneal injections of fluconazole or saline (controls) were administered 2 days after C. albicans...
A 58-year-old man presented with transient vertigo and pulsatile tinnitus. High-resolution comput... more A 58-year-old man presented with transient vertigo and pulsatile tinnitus. High-resolution computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, excision, and subsequent immunohistochemical assays were performed. Imaging showed a soft tissue mass in the epitympanum and mastoid with bone erosion of the tegmen tympani and a dural tail sign, suggesting meningioma. Subsequently, because of signs of clinical progression, a canal-wall-up attico-antromastoidectomy was performed, with near-complete removal of a granulomatous, ossifying, haemorrhagic mass. Radiological imaging was critical in determining the extent of the mass and excluding other pathologies. Due to the atypical clinical and radiological signs, the final diagnosis of capillary haemangioma of the middle ear and temporal bone was made only after surgical resection and histopathological examination with immunohistochemistry, which excluded meningioma. The contiguous occurrence of cutaneous capillary haemangioma of the lateral face a...
Radially oriented hypointense stripes in hyperintense cerebral white matter are recognized on T2-... more Radially oriented hypointense stripes in hyperintense cerebral white matter are recognized on T2-weighted images of certain lysosomal storage disorders. We compared in vivo and postmortem MR imaging with histopathologic findings in three patients with metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD), globoid cell leukodystrophy (GLD), and infantile GM1 gangliosidosis (GM1) to understand this characteristic MR imaging pattern. The in vivo MR imaging protocol comprised T1- and T2-weighted spin-echo and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery imaging. Postmortem MR imaging, including coronal 1-cm-thick brain sections, was performed after at least 5 weeks of formalin fixation and included T2-weighted spin-echo images and 3D fluid-attenuated inversion recovery images with high spatial resolution. Afterward, the sections were embedded in paraffin, whole-mount sections were made, and neuropathologic stains were applied. Similar imaging features were found in the three patients on in vivo and postmortem imag...
A case of fatal intracranial aspergillosis, extending from the sphenoid sinus via the orbit into ... more A case of fatal intracranial aspergillosis, extending from the sphenoid sinus via the orbit into the subarachnoid space of the optochiasmatic cistern and the cistern of the middle cerebral artery is presented in an immunosuppressed patient with multiple myeloma. Adequate treatment was not instituted and the patient died because the condition was not recognised and interpreted as a soft tissue extension of an orbital localization of myeloma. MRI, especially after intravenous injection of Gadolinium, depicted very accurately the extension of the disease, as defined at autopsy.
We report a 5-year-old child carrying polymerase gamma (POLG1) mutations, but strikingly normal o... more We report a 5-year-old child carrying polymerase gamma (POLG1) mutations, but strikingly normal oxidative phosphorylation analysis in muscle, fibroblasts and liver. Mutations in POLG1 have so far been described in children with severe combined oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) deficiencies and with the classical Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome. The patient presented with a delayed psychomotor development and ataxia during the first two years of life. From the third year of life he developed epilepsy and regression in development, together with symptoms of visual impairment and sensorineuronal deafness. Cerebrospinal fluid showed elevated lactic acid and protein concentrations. An elder brother had died due to combined OXPHOS deficiencies. Despite the clinical similarity with the elder brother, except for liver involvement, the OXPHOS system analysis in a frozen muscle biopsy was normal. For this reason a fresh muscle biopsy was performed, which has the advantage of the possibility of measuring the substrate oxidation rates and ATP production, part of the mitochondrial energy-generating system (MEGS). During the same session, biopsies of liver and fibroblasts were taken. These three tissues showed normal measurements of the MEGS capacity. Based on the phenotype of Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome in the elder brother, we decided to screen the POLG1 gene. Mutation analysis showed compound heterozygosity with two known mutations, A467T and G848S. The normal MEGS capacity in this patient expands the already existing complexity and heterogeneity of the childhood POLG1 patients and, on the basis of the high frequency of POLG1 mutations in childhood, warrants a liberal strategy with respect to mutation analysis.
Hypomyelination with atrophy of the basal ganglia and cerebellum (H-ABC) is a rare disease that h... more Hypomyelination with atrophy of the basal ganglia and cerebellum (H-ABC) is a rare disease that has been recently described. It must be remembered as a possible etiology of leukoencephalopathies in children. We describe a typical case of H-ABC in a 11-month-old boy. He presents with global development delay, oral dyskinesia, and global dystonia and spasticity. Magnetic resonance imaging disclosed typical features of H-ABC and clinical laboratory tests were all negative. A slow neurological deterioration has been detected with worsening of involuntary movements.
The term “limbic” was first used in 1664 by Thomas Willis to describe the cortical structures on ... more The term “limbic” was first used in 1664 by Thomas Willis to describe the cortical structures on the medial side of the cerebral hemisphere, surrounding the brain stem. Two centuries later, Paul Broca noticed that the cingulate gyrus and the parahippocampal gyrus form a border (limbus) around the corpus callosum and the brain stem. Broca subdivided his grand lobe limbique
Involvement of the cerebellum in the pathophysiology of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) in ... more Involvement of the cerebellum in the pathophysiology of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) in preterm infants is increasingly recognized. We aimed to assess the neuroprotective potential of intravenously administered multipotent adult progenitor cells (MAPCs) in the preterm cerebellum. Instrumented preterm ovine fetuses were subjected to transient global hypoxia-ischemia (HI) by 25 minutes of umbilical cord occlusion at 0.7 of gestation. After reperfusion, two doses of MAPCs were administered intravenously. MAPCs are a plastic adherent bone-marrow-derived population of adult progenitor cells with neuroprotective potency in experimental and clinical studies. Global HI caused marked cortical injury in the cerebellum, histologically indicated by disruption of cortical strata, impeded Purkinje cell development, and decreased dendritic arborization. Furthermore, global HI induced histopathological microgliosis, hypomyelination, and disruption of white matter organization. MAPC treatme...
RANK ligand (RANKL) is a member of the tumor necrosis factor alpha superfamily of cytokines. It i... more RANK ligand (RANKL) is a member of the tumor necrosis factor alpha superfamily of cytokines. It is the only known ligand binding to a membrane receptor named receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappa B (RANK), thereby triggering recruitment of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor associated factor (TRAF) adaptor proteins and activation of downstream pathways. RANK/RANKL signaling is controlled by a decoy receptor called osteoprotegerin (OPG), but also has additional more complex levels of regulation. The existing literature on RANK/RANKL signaling in cervical cancer was reviewed, particularly focusing on the effects on the microenvironment. RANKL and RANK are frequently co-expressed in cervical cancer cells lines and in carcinoma of the uterine cervix. RANKL and OPG expression strongly increases during cervical cancer progression. RANKL is directly secreted by cervical cancer cells, which may be a mechanism they use to create an immune suppressive environment. RANKL induces express...
Myoglobin, encoded by MB, is a small cytoplasmic globular hemoprotein highly expressed in cardiac... more Myoglobin, encoded by MB, is a small cytoplasmic globular hemoprotein highly expressed in cardiac myocytes and oxidative skeletal myofibers. Myoglobin binds O2, facilitates its intracellular transport and serves as a controller of nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species. Here, we identify a recurrent c.292C>T (p.His98Tyr) substitution in MB in fourteen members of six European families suffering from an autosomal dominant progressive myopathy with highly characteristic sarcoplasmic inclusions in skeletal and cardiac muscle. Myoglobinopathy manifests in adulthood with proximal and axial weakness that progresses to involve distal muscles and causes respiratory and cardiac failure. Biochemical characterization reveals that the mutant myoglobin has altered O2 binding, exhibits a faster heme dissociation rate and has a lower reduction potential compared to wild-type myoglobin. Preliminary studies show that mutant myoglobin may result in elevated superoxide levels at the cellular level...
Copy number alterations (CNAs) have increasingly become part of the diagnostic algorithm of glial... more Copy number alterations (CNAs) have increasingly become part of the diagnostic algorithm of glial tumors. Alterations such as homozygous deletion of CDKN2A/B , 7 +/ 10 - chromosome copy number changes or EGFR amplification are predictive of a poor prognosis. The codeletion of chromosome arms 1p and 19q, typically associated with oligodendroglioma, implies a more favorable prognosis. Detection of this codeletion by the current diagnostic standard, being fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), is sometimes however subject to technical and interpretation problems. In this study, we evaluated CNA detection by shallow whole-genome sequencing (sWGS) as an inexpensive, complementary molecular technique. A cohort of 36 glioma tissue samples, enriched with “difficult” and “ambiguous” cases, was analyzed by sWGS. sWGS results were compared with FISH assays of chromosomes 1p and 19q. In addition, CNAs relevant to glioblastoma diagnosis were explored. In 4/36 samples, EGFR (7p11.2) amplifications and homozygous loss of CDKN2A/B were identified by sWGS. Six out of 8 IDH –wild-type glioblastomas demonstrated a prognostic chromosome 7/chromosome 10 signature. In 11/36 samples, local interstitial and terminal 1p/19q alterations were detected by sWGS, implying that FISH’s targeted nature might promote false arm–level extrapolations. In this cohort, differences in overall survival between patients with and without codeletion were better pronounced by the sequencing-based distinction (likelihood ratio of 7.48) in comparison to FISH groupings (likelihood ratio of 0.97 at diagnosis and 1.79 ± 0.62 at reobservation), suggesting sWGS is more accurate than FISH. We recognized adverse effects of tissue block age on FISH signals. In addition, we show how sWGS reveals relevant aberrations beyond the 1p/19q state, such as EGFR amplification, combined gain of chromosome 7 and loss of chromosome 10, and homozygous loss of CDKN2A/B . The findings presented by this study might stimulate implementation of sWGS as a complementary, easy to apply technique for copy number detection.
Background Minimally invasive autopsy (MIA) is a validated and safe method to establish the cause... more Background Minimally invasive autopsy (MIA) is a validated and safe method to establish the cause of death (COD), mainly in low-resource settings. However, the additional clinical value of MIA in Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patients in a high-resource setting is unknown. The objective was to assess if and how MIA changed clinical COD and contributing diagnoses in deceased COVID-19 patients. Methods and findings A prospective observational cohort from April to May 2020 in a 981-bed teaching hospital in the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic in Belgium was established. Patients who died with either PCR-confirmed or radiologically confirmed COVID-19 infection were consecutively included. MIA consisted of whole-body CT and CT-guided Tru-Cut® biopsies. Diagnostic modalities were clinical chart review, radiology, microbiology, and histopathology which were assessed by two independent experts per modality. MIA COD and contributing diagnoses were established during a multi-disciplinary m...
e18028 Background: Conventional treatments for cervical cancer (CC) have reached a plateau and on... more e18028 Background: Conventional treatments for cervical cancer (CC) have reached a plateau and only limited progress for targeted therapy has been made over the last decades, resulting in a meager five-year survival rate of only 17% for the advanced stages. To improve long-term benefits for the patient, a promising hot field of research in oncology that opens new perspectives is immunotherapy. Even though CC has shown to be immunogenic, only a minority of patients respond to this type of treatment. In recent years, the RANKL/RANK signaling pathway has been implicated as a key immune modulating factor in the tumor microenvironment, allowing the cancer cells to evade the immune response by disrupting the immune-intrinsic crosstalk. Both RANKL and RANK are highly co-expressed in CC, which correlates with inferior clinicopathological parameters and an increased risk of death. Targeting this pathway may therefore be of great value in the treatment of CC and the quest to release the brake...
Journal of Neuropathology & Experimental Neurology, 2019
Nodding syndrome (NS) is an epileptic disorder occurring in children in African onchocerciasis en... more Nodding syndrome (NS) is an epileptic disorder occurring in children in African onchocerciasis endemic regions. Here, we describe the pathological changes in 9 individuals from northern Uganda who died with NS (n = 5) or other forms of onchocerciasis-associated epilepsy (OAE) (n = 4). Postmortem examinations were performed and clinical information was obtained. Formalin-fixed brain samples were stained by hematoxylin and eosin and immunohistochemistry was used to stain astrocytes (GFAP), macrophages (CD68), ubiquitin, α-synuclein, p62, TDP-43, amyloid β, and tau (AT8). The cerebellum showed atrophy and loss of Purkinje cells with hyperplasia of the Bergmann glia. Gliosis and features of past ventriculitis and/or meningitis were observed in all but 1 participant. CD68-positive macrophage clusters were observed in all cases in various degrees. Immunohistochemistry for amyloid β, α-synuclein, or TDP-43 was negative. Mild to sparse AT8-positive neurofibrillary tangle-like structures and...
Intra-amniotic Candida albicans (C. Albicans) infection is associated with preterm birth and high... more Intra-amniotic Candida albicans (C. Albicans) infection is associated with preterm birth and high morbidity and mortality rates. Survivors are prone to adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes. The mechanisms leading to these adverse neonatal brain outcomes remain largely unknown. To better understand the mechanisms underlying C. albicans-induced fetal brain injury, we studied immunological responses and structural changes of the fetal brain in a well-established translational ovine model of intra-amniotic C. albicans infection. In addition, we tested whether these potential adverse outcomes of the fetal brain were improved in utero by antifungal treatment with fluconazole. Pregnant ewes received an intra-amniotic injection of 10(7) colony-forming units C. albicans or saline (controls) at 3 or 5 days before preterm delivery at 0.8 of gestation (term ~ 150 days). Fetal intra-amniotic/intra-peritoneal injections of fluconazole or saline (controls) were administered 2 days after C. albicans...
A 58-year-old man presented with transient vertigo and pulsatile tinnitus. High-resolution comput... more A 58-year-old man presented with transient vertigo and pulsatile tinnitus. High-resolution computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, excision, and subsequent immunohistochemical assays were performed. Imaging showed a soft tissue mass in the epitympanum and mastoid with bone erosion of the tegmen tympani and a dural tail sign, suggesting meningioma. Subsequently, because of signs of clinical progression, a canal-wall-up attico-antromastoidectomy was performed, with near-complete removal of a granulomatous, ossifying, haemorrhagic mass. Radiological imaging was critical in determining the extent of the mass and excluding other pathologies. Due to the atypical clinical and radiological signs, the final diagnosis of capillary haemangioma of the middle ear and temporal bone was made only after surgical resection and histopathological examination with immunohistochemistry, which excluded meningioma. The contiguous occurrence of cutaneous capillary haemangioma of the lateral face a...
Radially oriented hypointense stripes in hyperintense cerebral white matter are recognized on T2-... more Radially oriented hypointense stripes in hyperintense cerebral white matter are recognized on T2-weighted images of certain lysosomal storage disorders. We compared in vivo and postmortem MR imaging with histopathologic findings in three patients with metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD), globoid cell leukodystrophy (GLD), and infantile GM1 gangliosidosis (GM1) to understand this characteristic MR imaging pattern. The in vivo MR imaging protocol comprised T1- and T2-weighted spin-echo and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery imaging. Postmortem MR imaging, including coronal 1-cm-thick brain sections, was performed after at least 5 weeks of formalin fixation and included T2-weighted spin-echo images and 3D fluid-attenuated inversion recovery images with high spatial resolution. Afterward, the sections were embedded in paraffin, whole-mount sections were made, and neuropathologic stains were applied. Similar imaging features were found in the three patients on in vivo and postmortem imag...
A case of fatal intracranial aspergillosis, extending from the sphenoid sinus via the orbit into ... more A case of fatal intracranial aspergillosis, extending from the sphenoid sinus via the orbit into the subarachnoid space of the optochiasmatic cistern and the cistern of the middle cerebral artery is presented in an immunosuppressed patient with multiple myeloma. Adequate treatment was not instituted and the patient died because the condition was not recognised and interpreted as a soft tissue extension of an orbital localization of myeloma. MRI, especially after intravenous injection of Gadolinium, depicted very accurately the extension of the disease, as defined at autopsy.
We report a 5-year-old child carrying polymerase gamma (POLG1) mutations, but strikingly normal o... more We report a 5-year-old child carrying polymerase gamma (POLG1) mutations, but strikingly normal oxidative phosphorylation analysis in muscle, fibroblasts and liver. Mutations in POLG1 have so far been described in children with severe combined oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) deficiencies and with the classical Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome. The patient presented with a delayed psychomotor development and ataxia during the first two years of life. From the third year of life he developed epilepsy and regression in development, together with symptoms of visual impairment and sensorineuronal deafness. Cerebrospinal fluid showed elevated lactic acid and protein concentrations. An elder brother had died due to combined OXPHOS deficiencies. Despite the clinical similarity with the elder brother, except for liver involvement, the OXPHOS system analysis in a frozen muscle biopsy was normal. For this reason a fresh muscle biopsy was performed, which has the advantage of the possibility of measuring the substrate oxidation rates and ATP production, part of the mitochondrial energy-generating system (MEGS). During the same session, biopsies of liver and fibroblasts were taken. These three tissues showed normal measurements of the MEGS capacity. Based on the phenotype of Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome in the elder brother, we decided to screen the POLG1 gene. Mutation analysis showed compound heterozygosity with two known mutations, A467T and G848S. The normal MEGS capacity in this patient expands the already existing complexity and heterogeneity of the childhood POLG1 patients and, on the basis of the high frequency of POLG1 mutations in childhood, warrants a liberal strategy with respect to mutation analysis.
Hypomyelination with atrophy of the basal ganglia and cerebellum (H-ABC) is a rare disease that h... more Hypomyelination with atrophy of the basal ganglia and cerebellum (H-ABC) is a rare disease that has been recently described. It must be remembered as a possible etiology of leukoencephalopathies in children. We describe a typical case of H-ABC in a 11-month-old boy. He presents with global development delay, oral dyskinesia, and global dystonia and spasticity. Magnetic resonance imaging disclosed typical features of H-ABC and clinical laboratory tests were all negative. A slow neurological deterioration has been detected with worsening of involuntary movements.
The term “limbic” was first used in 1664 by Thomas Willis to describe the cortical structures on ... more The term “limbic” was first used in 1664 by Thomas Willis to describe the cortical structures on the medial side of the cerebral hemisphere, surrounding the brain stem. Two centuries later, Paul Broca noticed that the cingulate gyrus and the parahippocampal gyrus form a border (limbus) around the corpus callosum and the brain stem. Broca subdivided his grand lobe limbique
Involvement of the cerebellum in the pathophysiology of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) in ... more Involvement of the cerebellum in the pathophysiology of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) in preterm infants is increasingly recognized. We aimed to assess the neuroprotective potential of intravenously administered multipotent adult progenitor cells (MAPCs) in the preterm cerebellum. Instrumented preterm ovine fetuses were subjected to transient global hypoxia-ischemia (HI) by 25 minutes of umbilical cord occlusion at 0.7 of gestation. After reperfusion, two doses of MAPCs were administered intravenously. MAPCs are a plastic adherent bone-marrow-derived population of adult progenitor cells with neuroprotective potency in experimental and clinical studies. Global HI caused marked cortical injury in the cerebellum, histologically indicated by disruption of cortical strata, impeded Purkinje cell development, and decreased dendritic arborization. Furthermore, global HI induced histopathological microgliosis, hypomyelination, and disruption of white matter organization. MAPC treatme...
RANK ligand (RANKL) is a member of the tumor necrosis factor alpha superfamily of cytokines. It i... more RANK ligand (RANKL) is a member of the tumor necrosis factor alpha superfamily of cytokines. It is the only known ligand binding to a membrane receptor named receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappa B (RANK), thereby triggering recruitment of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor associated factor (TRAF) adaptor proteins and activation of downstream pathways. RANK/RANKL signaling is controlled by a decoy receptor called osteoprotegerin (OPG), but also has additional more complex levels of regulation. The existing literature on RANK/RANKL signaling in cervical cancer was reviewed, particularly focusing on the effects on the microenvironment. RANKL and RANK are frequently co-expressed in cervical cancer cells lines and in carcinoma of the uterine cervix. RANKL and OPG expression strongly increases during cervical cancer progression. RANKL is directly secreted by cervical cancer cells, which may be a mechanism they use to create an immune suppressive environment. RANKL induces express...
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Papers by Martin Lammens