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Anton H. N. Hopman

Maastricht University

ORCID: 0000-0002-5136-2955

Publishes on Genomic variations and chromosomal abnormalities, Cervical Cancer and HPV Research, Acute Myeloid Leukemia Research. 184 papers and 7.2k citations.

184Publications
7.2kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Marked differences in survival rate between smokers and nonsmokers with HPV 16‐associated tonsillar carcinomas
Harriët C. Hafkamp, J.J. Manni, Annick Haesevoets et al.|International Journal of Cancer|2008
Cited by 350Open Access

Oncogenic human papillomavirus (HPV) is a causative agent in a subgroup of head and neck carcinomas, particularly tonsillar squamous cell carcinomas (TSCC). This study was undertaken because controversial data exist on the physical status of HPV-DNA and the use of p16(INK4A) overexpression as surrogate HPV marker, and to examine the impact of HPV and tobacco consumption on the clinical course of TSCC. Tissue sections of 81 TSCC were analyzed by HPV 16-specific fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and p16(INK4A)-specific immunohistochemistry. Results were correlated with clinical and demographic data. HPV 16 integration was detected by FISH as punctate signals in 33 out of 81 (41%) TSCC, 32 of which showed p16(INK4A) accumulation. Only 5 out of 48 HPV-negative tumors showed p16(INK4A) immunostaining (p < 0.0001). The presence of HPV furthermore correlates significantly with low tobacco (p = 0.002) and alcohol intake (p = 0.011), poor differentiation grade (p = 0.019), small tumor size (p = 0.024), presence of a local metastasis (p = 0.001) and a decreased (loco)regional recurrence rate (p = 0.039). Statistical analysis revealed that smoking significantly increases the risk of cancer death from TSCC and that non-smoking patients with HPV-containing TSCC show a remarkably better disease-specific survival rate. HPV 16 is integrated in 41% of TSCC and strongly correlates with p16(INK4A) overexpression, implicating the latter to be a reliable HPV biomarker. Patients with HPV-positive tumors show a favorable prognosis as compared to those with HPV-negative tumors, but tobacco use is the strongest prognostic indicator. These findings indicate that oncogenic processes in the tonsils of non-smokers differ from those occurring in smokers, the former being related to HPV 16 infection.

Mosaicism of autosomes and sex chromosomes in morphologically normal, monospermic preimplantation human embryos
Joyce Harper, Edith Coonen, Alan H. Handyside et al.|Prenatal Diagnosis|1995
Cited by 311

Abstract We have previously detected chromosome abnormalities in human embryos whilst identifying the sex for preimplantation diagnosis of X‐linked disease. In this study we assess the incidence of these abnormalities, both for sex chromosomes and autosomes 1 and 17, using dual fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). Sixty‐nine normally fertilized embryos of good morphology at the 6–10 cell stage (day 3 post‐insemination) were examined. The embryos were spread whole using HCl and Tween 20 to dissolve the cytoplasm. Thirty‐four embryos were analysed for the sex chromosomes and 35 for autosomes 1 and 17. All probes were directly labelled with fluorochromes allowing analysis in 2 h. Control lymphocytes demonstrated that the probes were of high specificity. For the sex chromosomes, five embryos were mosaic (15 per cent) with the remaining 29 being uniformly XX or XY. In no case was an XX nucleus found in an otherwise XY embryo, indicating that even though mosaicism for the sex chromosomes is present, such abnormalities would not lead to a misdiagnosis of sex. For the autosomes, 16 embryos were abnormal (46 per cent); one embryo was triploid, one was monosomic for chromosome 1, and ten others were diploid mosaics (three diploid/aneuploid, three diploid/polyploid, and four diploid/haploid). A further four embryos had variable chromosome numbers in the majority of nuclei which appeared to be the result of uncontrolled mitotic division. The presence of haploidy or double monosomy, which occurred in 15 per cent of nuclei, has important implications for the diagnosis of trisomies and dominant disorders.

Rapid Synthesis of Biotin-, Digoxigenin-, Trinitrophenyl-, and Fluorochrome-labeled Tyramides and Their Application for In Situ Hybridization Using CARD Amplification
Anton H. N. Hopman, Frans C.�S. Ramaekers, Ernst‐Jan M. Speel|Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry|1998
Cited by 255Open Access

A one-step procedure for the synthesis of different tyramide conjugates, which can be utilized in the catalyzed reporter deposition (CARD) amplification system, is described. Succinimidyl esters of biotin, digoxigenin, and of the fluorochromes fluorescein, rhodamine, aminomethylcoumarine acetic acid, and Cy3 were coupled to tyramine in dimethylformamide (DMF) adjusted to a pH of 7.0-8.0 with triethylamine (TEA). The coupling reaction can be performed within 2 hr and the reaction mixture can be applied without further purification steps. Furthermore, trinitrophenyl (TNP)-tyramide was prepared by adding 2,4,6,-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid to tyramine dissolved in either MilliQ/DMF basified with TEA or in an NaHCO3 (pH 9.5) buffer. A subsequent precipitation of the TNP-tyramide resulted in a high-yield isolation of this conjugate. The synthesized tyramide conjugates were applied successfully in single- and multiple-target in situ hybridization (ISH) procedures to detect both repetitive and single-copy DNA target sequences in cell preparations with high efficiency. The described approach provides an easy and fast method to prepare a variety of tyramide conjugates in bulk amounts at relatively low cost.

A subset of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas exhibits integration of HPV 16/18 DNA and overexpression of p16<sup>INK4A</sup> and p53 in the absence of mutations in p53 exons 5–8
Harriët C. Hafkamp, Ernst‐Jan M. Speel, Annick Haesevoets et al.|International Journal of Cancer|2003
Cited by 250Open Access

Besides well-known risk factors such as tobacco use and alcohol consumption, oncogenic human papillomavirus (HPV) infection also has recently been suggested to promote head and neck tumorigenesis. HPV is known to cause cancer by inactivation of cell cycle regulators p53 and pRb via expression of viral oncoproteins E6 and E7. This indicates that p53 mutations are not a prerequisite in HPV-induced tumor development. However, discrepancy exists with respect to the frequency of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) harboring DNA of oncogenic HPV and the fraction of these tumors showing p53 mutations. In our study, we examined the frequency of HNSCC demonstrating HPV 16/18 integration as identified by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and investigated their p53 (mutation) status by immunohistochemistry and single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis of exons 5-8. Paraffin-embedded, archival biopsy material from 27 premalignant mucosal lesions and 47 cases of HNSCC were analyzed. Ten of the 47 (21%) HNSCC unequivocally exhibited HPV 16 integration, including 8 of 12 (67%) tonsillar carcinomas. This is supported by the immunohistochemical detection of p16(INK4A) overexpression in all 10 HPV-positive tumors. Although FISH is considered to be less sensitive than PCR-based methods for HPV detection, our data clearly demonstrate clonal association of HPV with these tumors, as illustrated by the presence of integrated HPV 16 in both the primary tumor and their metastases in 2 patients. In contrast, HPV 16/18 DNA could not be detected in the premalignant lesions. In 30 of 47 (64%), HNSCC accumulation of p53 was observed, including 8 of the 10 HPV-positive carcinomas. However, in none of the latter cases could mutations in exons 5-8 be identified, except for a polymorphism in codon 213 of exon 6 in one patient. Evaluation of clinical data revealed a significant inverse relation between tobacco use with or without alcohol consumption, and HPV positivity of the tumors.