Publications by authors named "Vassart G"

Thyrotropin (TSH) is the master regulator of thyroid gland growth and function. Resistance to TSH (RTSH) describes conditions with reduced sensitivity to TSH. Dominantly inherited RTSH has been linked to a locus on chromosome 15q, but its genetic basis has remained elusive.

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The gastrointestinal epithelium constitutes a chemosensory system for microbiota-derived metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids (SCFA). Here, we investigate the spatial distribution of Olfr78, one of the SCFA receptors, in the mouse intestine and study the transcriptome of colon enteroendocrine cells expressing Olfr78. The receptor is predominantly detected in the enterochromaffin and L subtypes in the proximal and distal colon, respectively.

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The initiation of puberty is driven by an upsurge in hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secretion. In turn, GnRH secretion upsurge depends on the development of a complex GnRH neuroendocrine network during embryonic life. Although delayed puberty (DP) affects up to 2% of the population, is highly heritable, and is associated with adverse health outcomes, the genes underlying DP remain largely unknown.

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The Lgr5 receptor is a marker of intestinal stem cells (ISCs) that regulates Wnt/b-catenin signaling. In this study, phenotype analysis of knockin/knockout Lgr5-eGFP-IRES-Cre and Lgr5-DTReGFP embryos reveals that Lgr5 deficiency during Wnt-mediated cytodifferentiation results in amplification of ISCs and early differentiation into Paneth cells, which can be counteracted by in utero treatment with the Wnt inhibitor LGK974. Conditional ablation of Lgr5 postnatally, but not in adults, alters stem cell fate toward the Paneth lineage.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers developed a new method to isolate and study fetal progenitor cells from the digestive tract, focusing on their characteristics before they fully differentiate.
  • In 2013, Mustata successfully isolated fetal intestinal progenitors that grew as spheroids, using a culture system originally meant for adult stem cells.
  • The study presents a refined protocol for isolating and maintaining gastric spheroids from the distal pre-glandular stomach, highlighting their strong self-renewal abilities.
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Article Synopsis
  • The tri-dimensional culture technique, first described by Sato in 2009, helps isolate and grow epithelial stem cells from various organs, starting with the adult small intestine.
  • Barker built on this method in 2010 by isolating antral stem cells to create organoids that mimic the mature pyloric epithelium, aiding in the study of gastric health and disease.
  • The authors adapted Barker's protocol to examine both stable and regenerating tissues, providing detailed steps for isolating and culturing antral glands and individual cells for potential further research.
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In the developing cochlea, Wnt/β-catenin signaling positively regulates the proliferation of precursors and promotes the formation of hair cells by up-regulating Atoh1 expression. Not much, however, is known about the regulation of Wnt/β-catenin activity in the cochlea. In multiple tissues, the activity of Wnt/β-catenin signaling is modulated by an interaction between LGR receptors and their ligands from the R-spondin family.

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Mouse fetal intestinal progenitors lining the epithelium prior to villogenesis grow as spheroids when cultured ex vivo and express the transmembrane glycoprotein Trop2 as a marker. Here, we report the characterization of Trop2-expressing cells from fetal pre-glandular stomach, growing as immortal undifferentiated spheroids, and their relationship with gastric development and regeneration. Trop2(+) cells generating gastric spheroids differed from adult glandular Lgr5(+) stem cells, but appeared highly related to fetal intestinal spheroids.

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In adults, autonomous adenomas of the thyroid causing hyperthyroidism are relatively common and are most often due to somatic mutations that increase the constitutive activity of the thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor (TSHR). By contrast, autonomous adenomas in hyperthyroid children are exceptional and reports of their clinical and molecular characteristics are few. We reviewed papers describing 16 autonomous adenomas due to a somatic mutation activating the TSHR and diagnosed in patients younger than 18 years, to which we added two of our own unpublished observations in a 4- and 8-year-old with the same TSHR mutation (c.

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Immortal spheroids were generated from fetal mouse intestine using the culture system initially developed to culture organoids from adult intestinal epithelium. Spheroid proportion progressively decreases from fetal to postnatal period, with a corresponding increase in production of organoids. Like organoids, spheroids show Wnt-dependent indefinite self-renewing properties but display a poorly differentiated phenotype reminiscent of incompletely caudalized progenitors.

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Glycoprotein hormone receptors show strong negative cooperativity. As a consequence, at physiological hormone concentrations, a single agonist binds to a receptor dimer. Here we present evidence that constitutively active receptors lose cooperative allosteric regulation in direct relation with their basal activity.

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Objective: To analyze the clinical, hormonal, anatomical, and molecular characteristics of Leydig cell tumors, a very rare cause of progressive hyperandrogenism in children.

Study Design: Description of a 9-year-old boy with isosexual precocious pseudopuberty, and of a 12-year-old girl with rapidly progressive virilization, both due to a pure Leydig cell tumor. Review of all cases of pediatric Leydig cell tumors published since 1999 (when the first somatic mutations of the luteinizing hormone receptor were described) and reporting hormonal and/or molecular data.

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Background: Nephrogenic syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis (NSIAD) is a recently described entity, linked to gain-of-function mutations (R137C and R137L) in arginine vasopressin (AVP) gene leading to chronic activation of tubular V2 AVP receptor (V2R) and thus free water reabsorption. In addition to collecting duct cells, the V2R is also expressed in endothelial cells, where it mediates the rise in circulating levels of von Willebrand factor (vWF) and coagulation factor VIII (fVIII). Recent in vitro data showed that these mutant receptors are resistant to vasopressin-stimulated cAMP production.

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Objective: Genetic disorders of calcium metabolism arise in a familial or sporadic setting. The calcium-sensing receptor (CASR) plays a key role in maintaining calcium homeostasis and study of the CASR gene can be clinically useful in determining etiology and appropriate therapeutic approaches. We report two cases of novel CASR gene mutations that illustrate the varying clinical presentations and discuss these in terms of the current understanding of CASR function.

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In the mid eighties, thyroglobulin and thyroperoxidase had been cloned and sequenced, and the obvious next target for thyroidologists was the TSH receptor. Many labs entered the race in a healthy (and fierce) competitive mood, exploiting all technologies available at that time. We present here the cloning of the TSH receptor and some of the main fall-out, as seen from the Brussels perspective.

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Gene inactivation of the orphan G protein-coupled receptor LGR4, a paralogue of the epithelial-stem-cell marker LGR5, results in a 50% decrease in epithelial cell proliferation and an 80% reduction in terminal differentiation of Paneth cells in postnatal mouse intestinal crypts. When cultured ex vivo, LGR4-deficient crypts or progenitors, but not LGR5-deficient progenitors, die rapidly with marked downregulation of stem-cell markers and Wnt target genes, including Lgr5. Partial rescue of this phenotype is achieved by addition of LiCl to the culture medium, but not Wnt agonists.

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Over the past 20 years, naturally occurring mutations that affect G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) have been identified, mainly in patients with endocrine diseases. The study of loss-of-function or gain-of-function mutations has contributed to our understanding of the pathophysiology of several diseases with classic hypophenotypes or hyperphenotypes of the target endocrine organs, respectively. Simultaneously, study of the mutant receptors ex vivo was instrumental in delineating the relationships between the structure and function of these important physiological and pharmacological molecules.

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Article Synopsis
  • Congenital hypothyroidism from thyroid dysgenesis (CHTD) is often sporadic, primarily due to abnormalities in thyroid tissue development, with ectopic tissue being the most common issue (up to 80%).
  • Genetic mutations in known transcription factors are rare, suggesting that environmental or other genetic factors may significantly influence the condition, as shown by a high discordance rate in identical twins (92%).
  • Analyzing gene expression and DNA methylation differences between normal and ectopic thyroid tissues revealed that specific genes related to embryonic development and signaling pathways are impacted, indicating that the molecular mechanisms behind ectopic thyroid formation are complex and require further investigation.
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Background: Bone morphogenetic protein 15 (BMP15) is an oocyte-derived growth factor acting as a major player in follicle differentiation in mammals. Mutations in the BMP15 gene, some of which lead to defective secretion of bioactive dimers, have been associated with premature ovarian failure (POF) in humans.

Methods: Fifty patients diagnosed with POF with a normal karyotype were included in the study.

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