24 results match your criteria: "VIB and University of Leuven[Affiliation]"
Sci Immunol
May 2022
Immunology Programme, Babraham Institute, Cambridge, UK.
The failure to generate enduring humoral immunity after vaccination is a hallmark of advancing age. This can be attributed to a reduction in the germinal center (GC) response, which generates long-lived antibody-secreting cells that protect against (re)infection. Despite intensive investigation, the primary cellular defect underlying impaired GCs in aging has not been identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Neurosci
March 2021
Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Reactive astrocytes are astrocytes undergoing morphological, molecular, and functional remodeling in response to injury, disease, or infection of the CNS. Although this remodeling was first described over a century ago, uncertainties and controversies remain regarding the contribution of reactive astrocytes to CNS diseases, repair, and aging. It is also unclear whether fixed categories of reactive astrocytes exist and, if so, how to identify them.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuron
August 2020
UK Dementia Research Institute at UCL, University College London, WC1E 6BT London, UK. Electronic address:
Identifying effective treatments for Alzheimer's disease (AD) has proven challenging and has instigated a shift in AD research focus toward the earliest disease-initiating cellular mechanisms. A key insight has been an increase in soluble Aβ oligomers in early AD that is causally linked to neuronal and circuit hyperexcitability. However, other accumulating AD-related peptides and proteins, including those derived from the same amyloid precursor protein, such as Aη or sAPPα, and autonomously, such as tau, exhibit surprising opposing effects on circuit dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
March 2020
Laboratory of Lymphocyte Signalling and Development, Babraham Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Germinal centres (GCs) are T follicular helper cell (Tfh)-dependent structures that form in response to vaccination, producing long-lived antibody secreting plasma cells and memory B cells that protect against subsequent infection. With advancing age the GC and Tfh cell response declines, resulting in impaired humoral immunity. We sought to discover what underpins the poor Tfh cell response in ageing and whether it is possible to correct it.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Rev Immunol
October 2018
VIB and University of Leuven, Leuven, 3000, Belgium.
Nature
January 2016
Angiogenesis &Metabolism Laboratory, Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research, D-61231 Bad Nauheim, Germany.
Endothelial cells (ECs) are plastic cells that can switch between growth states with different bioenergetic and biosynthetic requirements. Although quiescent in most healthy tissues, ECs divide and migrate rapidly upon proangiogenic stimulation. Adjusting endothelial metabolism to the growth state is central to normal vessel growth and function, yet it is poorly understood at the molecular level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
October 2015
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia 5005, Australia.
IL-17-producing helper T (Th17) cells are critical for host defense against extracellular pathogens but also drive numerous autoimmune diseases. Th17 cells that differ in their inflammatory potential have been described including IL-10-producing Th17 cells that are weak inducers of inflammation and highly inflammatory, IL-23-driven, GM-CSF/IFNγ-producing Th17 cells. However, their distinct developmental requirements, functions and trafficking mechanisms in vivo remain poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2016
Section of Genetics, Department of Basic Sciences and Aquatic Medicine, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Biosciences, Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU),Oslo, Norway.
Background: Copy number aberrations frequently occur during the development of many cancers. Such events affect dosage of involved genes and may cause further genomic instability and progression of cancer. In this survey, canine SNP microarrays were used to study 117 canine mammary tumours from 69 dogs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArthritis Rheumatol
June 2015
VIB and University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Objective: To identify the underlying genetic defect in a 16-year-old girl with severe early-onset and refractory systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), IgA deficiency, and mild lower limb spasticity without neuroradiologic manifestations.
Methods: Whole-exome sequencing and extensive immunologic analysis were performed on samples from the index patient.
Results: We identified a de novo p.
Immunol Cell Biol
April 2015
Department of Hematology, GIGA I University of Liège, Liège, Belgium.
J Allergy Clin Immunol
January 2015
Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Childhood Immunology, Department of Pediatrics, University Hospitals Leuven and University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. Electronic address:
Nat Commun
October 2015
1] Lebow Institute of Myeloma Therapeutics and Jerome Lipper Multiple Myeloma Center, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA [2] Boston Veterans Administration Healthcare System, West Roxbury, Massachusetts 02132, USA.
Multiple myeloma is an incurable plasma cell malignancy with a complex and incompletely understood molecular pathogenesis. Here we use whole-exome sequencing, copy-number profiling and cytogenetics to analyse 84 myeloma samples. Most cases have a complex subclonal structure and show clusters of subclonal variants, including subclonal driver mutations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Genet
February 2014
1] Cancer Genome Project, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Hinxton, UK. [2] Addenbrooke's National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust, Cambridge, UK. [3] Department of Haematology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK. [4].
The ETV6-RUNX1 fusion gene, found in 25% of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) cases, is acquired in utero but requires additional somatic mutations for overt leukemia. We used exome and low-coverage whole-genome sequencing to characterize secondary events associated with leukemic transformation. RAG-mediated deletions emerge as the dominant mutational process, characterized by recombination signal sequence motifs near breakpoints, incorporation of non-templated sequence at junctions, ∼30-fold enrichment at promoters and enhancers of genes actively transcribed in B cell development and an unexpectedly high ratio of recurrent to non-recurrent structural variants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenes Immun
March 2014
1] Research Center, Immunology-Oncology Section, Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada [2] Département de Microbiologie, Infectiologie et Immunologie, Université de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Immunoregulatory T cells have been identified as key modulators of peripheral tolerance and participate in preventing autoimmune diseases. CD4(-)CD8(-) (double negative, DN) T cells compose one of these immunoregulatory T-cell subsets, where the injection of DN T cells confers protection from autoimmune diabetes progression. Interestingly, genetic loci defining the function and number of CD4(+)CD25(+)Foxp3(+) regulatory T cells (Tregs) coincide with at least some autoimmune disease susceptibility loci.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Immunol
October 2013
Autoimmune Genetics Laboratory, VIB and University of Leuven, Campus Gasthuisberg, Leuven, Belgium.
Murine and human CD4(+) regulatory T (Treg) cells expressing the Forkhead box p3 (Foxp3) transcription factor represent a distinct, highly differentiated CD4(+) T cell lineage that is programmed for dominant self-tolerance and control of immune responses against a variety of foreign antigens. Sustained Foxp3 expression in these cells drives the differentiation of a regulatory phenotype and ensures the stability of their suppressive functions under a variety of inflammatory settings. Some recent studies have challenged this premise and advanced the notion that Foxp3(+) Treg cells manifest a high degree of functional plasticity that enables them to adapt and reprogram into effector-like T cells in response to various inflammatory stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Mol Life Sci
November 2012
Autoimmune Genetics Laboratory, VIB and University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Recent research into the role of microRNA (miR) in the immune system has identified the miR-29 family as critical regulators of key processes in adaptive immunity. The miR-29 family consists of four members with shared regulatory capacity, namely miR-29a, miR-29b-1, miR-29b-2 and miR-29c. Being expressed in both T and B cells, as well as the main accessory cell types of thymic epithelium and dendritic cells, the miR-29 family has been identified as a putative regulator of immunity due to the predicted suppression of key immunological pathways.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Immunol
May 2012
Autoimmune Genetics Laboratory, VIB and University of Leuven, Belgium.
The thymus is the primary organ for T-cell differentiation and maturation. Unlike other major organs, the thymus is highly dynamic, capable of undergoing multiple rounds of almost complete atrophy followed by rapid restoration. The process of thymic atrophy, or involution, results in decreased thymopoiesis and emigration of naïve T cells to the periphery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Autoimmun
February 2012
Autoimmune Genetics Laboratory, VIB and University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
With an increasing number of studies demonstrating alterations in T cell microRNA expression during autoimmune disease, modulation of the T cell microRNA network is considered a potential therapeutic strategy. Due to the complex and often opposing interactions of individual microRNA, prioritization of therapeutic targets first requires dissecting the dominant effects of the T cell microRNA network. Initial results utilizing a unidirectional screen suggested that the tolerogenic functions were dominant, with spontaneous colitis resulting from T cell-specific excision of Dicer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunol Cell Biol
November 2011
VIB and University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Prog Mol Biol Transl Sci
October 2010
VIB and University of Leuven, Leuven, Belguim.
J Clin Immunol
May 2010
VIB and University of Leuven, Leuven, 3000, Belgium.
Introduction: MicroRNA are emerging as key regulators of the development and function of adaptive immunity. These 19-24 nucleotide regulatory RNA molecules have essential roles in multiple faucets of adaptive immunity, from regulating the development of the key cellular players to the activation and function in immune responses.
Discussion: MicroRNA are involved in T cell and B cell differentiation in the thymus and bone marrow, and subsequent peripheral homeostasis.
Brief Bioinform
September 2009
Department of Human Genetics, VIB and University of Leuven, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium.
Metazoan transcription regulation occurs through the concerted action of multiple transcription factors that bind co-operatively to cis-regulatory modules (CRMs). The annotation of these key regulators of transcription is lagging far behind the annotation of the transcriptome itself. Here, we give an overview of existing computational methods to detect these CRMs in metazoan genomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEMBO J
August 2005
Laboratory of Neurogenetics, Department of Human Genetics, Flanders Interuniversity Institute for Biotechnology (VIB) and University of Leuven, School of Medicine, Leuven, Belgium.
The mechanisms regulating the outgrowth of neurites during development, as well as after injury, are key to the understanding of the wiring and functioning of the brain under normal and pathological conditions. The amyloid precursor protein (APP) is involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, its physiological role in the central nervous system is not known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Mol Life Sci
September 2005
Laboratory of Neurogenetics, Department of Human Genetics, VIB and University of Leuven School of Medicine, 3000, Leuven, Belgium.
Vertebrate and invertebrate nervous tissue is derived from early embryonic ectoderm, which also gives rise to epidermal derivatives such as skin. Proneural basic helix-loop-helix (bHLH) transcription factors are the key players in the formation of peripheral nervous system (PNS) and central nervous system (CNS) from naïve ectoderm to differentiated postmitotic neurons. The comparative approach and the use of a wide range of animal models have led to increasingly comprehensive investigations of this issue in the last decade.
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