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Ronald De Zanger

Center for Beta Cell Therapy in Diabetes

Publishes on Liver physiology and pathology, Liver Disease Diagnosis and Treatment, Immune Cell Function and Interaction. 60 papers and 1.8k citations.

60Publications
1.8kTotal Citations

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Quantitation, tissue distribution and proliferation kinetics of kupffer cells in normal rat liver
Cited by 365Open Access

In normal rat liver, Kupffer cells were unequivocally identified using peroxidase cytochemistry by light microscopy in semithin plastic sections. The Kupffer cell population was found to constitute 31% of the sinusoidal cells and by morphometry and serial sectioning, a mean absolute number of 14 to 20 X 10(6) Kupffer cells per g liver was calculated. The mean distribution of Kupffer cells in the liver lobules was 43% in the periportal, 28% in the midzonal and 29% in the central area of the lobule. Administration of latex particles labeled only 64% of all Kupffer cells, and in particular centrally located cells, showed a lower activity of latex uptake, even at overloading doses. Furthermore, the latter cells were of smaller size than periportal Kupffer cell profiles. The mean number and distribution of latex-labeled Kupffer cells did not change over a period of 3 months, indicating a long lifetime for these resident macrophages. This slow population turnover was supported by the observed small mitotic index, 0.06% after a 6 hr arrest by vinblastine, and by the small [3H]thymidine labeling index which did not change over a period of 3 weeks after administration of the label. It is proposed that the Kupffer cell population, under physiologic conditions, is a long-living and self-renewing population, the kinetics of which substantially differ from those of other sinusoidal cell types.

Drying cells for SEM, AFM and TEM by hexamethyldisilazane: a study on hepatic endothelial cells
Filip Braet, Ronald De Zanger, Eddie Wisse|Journal of Microscopy|1997
Cited by 324

Critical point drying (CPD) is a common method of drying biological specimens for scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Drying by evaporation of hexamethyldisilazane (HMDS) has been described as a good alternative. This method, however, is infrequently used. Therefore, we reassessed HMDS drying. Cultured rat hepatic sinusoidal endothelial cells (LEC), possessing fragile fenestrae and sieve plates, were subjected to CPD and HMDS drying and evaluated in the scanning electron microscope, atomic force microscope (AFM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM). We observed no differences between the two methods regarding cellular ultrastructure. In contrast with CPD, HMDS drying takes only a few minutes, less effort, low costs for chemicals and requires no equipment. We conclude that HMDS-dried specimens have equal quality to CPD ones. Furthermore, the method also proved useful for drying whole-mount cells for TEM and AFM.

Structure and Function of Sinusoidal Lining Cells in the Liver
Eddie Wisse, Filip Braet, Dianzhong Luo et al.|Toxicologic Pathology|1996
Cited by 296

The hepatic sinusoid harbors 4 different cells: endothelial cells (100, 101), Kupffer cells (96, 102, 103), fat-storing cells (34, 51, 93), and pit cells (14, 107, 108). Each cell type has its own specific morphology and functions, and no transitional stages exist between the cells. These cells have the potential to proliferate locally, either in normal or in special conditions, that is, experiments or disease. Sinusoidal cells from a functional unit together with the parenchymal cells. Isolation protocols exist for all sinusoidal cells. Endothelial cells filter the fluids, exchanged between the sinusoid and the space of Disse through fenestrae (100), which measure 175 nm in diameter and are grouped in sieve plates. Fenestrae occupy 6-8% of the surface (106). No intact basal lamina is present under these cells (100). Various factors change the number and diameter of fenestrae [pressure, alcohol, serotonin, and nicotin; for a review, see Fraser et al (32)]. These changes mainly affect the passage of lipoproteins, which contain cholesterol and vitamin A among other components. Fat-storing cells are pericytes, located in the space of Disse, with long, contractile processes, which probably influence liver (sinusoidal) blood flow. Fat-storing cells possess characteristic fat droplets, which contain a large part of the body's depot of vitamin A (91, 93). These cells play a major role in the synthesis of extracellular matrix (ECM) (34, 39-41). Strongly reduced levels of vitamin A occur in alcoholic livers developing fibrosis (56). Vitamin A deficiency transforms fat-storing cells into myofibroblast-like cells with enhanced ECM production (38). Kupffer cells accumulate in periportal areas. They specifically endocytose endotoxin (70), which activates these macrophages. Lipopolysaccharide, together with interferon gamma, belongs to the most potent activators of Kupffer cells (28). As a result of activation, these cells secrete oxygen radicals, tumor necrosis factor, interleukin 1, interleukin 6, and a series of eicosanoids (28) and become cytotoxic against tumor cells [e.g., colon carcinoma cells (19, 22, 48)]. Toxic secretory products can cause necrosis of the liver parenchyma, which constitutes a crucial factor in liver transplantation (55). Pit cells possess characteristic azurophylic granules and display a high level of spontaneous cytolytic activity against various tumor cells, identifying themselves as natural killer cells (10). The number and cytotoxicity of pit cells can be considerably enhanced with biological response modifiers, such as Zymosan or interleukin 2 (8). Pit cell proliferation occurs within the liver, but recent evidence indicates that blood large granular lymphocytes develop into pit cells in 2 steps involving high- and low-density pit cells (88). Kupffer cells control the motility, adherence, viability, and cytotoxicity of pit cells (89), whereas cytotoxicity against tumor cells is synergistically enhanced (80, 81).

Structure and dynamics of the fenestrae-associated cytoskeleton of rat liver sinusoidal endothelial cells
Cited by 124Open Access

This article describes the cytoskeleton associated with fenestrae and sieve plates of rat liver sinusoidal endothelial cells. Fenestrae control the exchange between the blood and parenchymal cells. We present evidence indicating that several agents that change the fenestrae and sieve plates also cause changes in the cytoskeleton. Cultured liver endothelial cells (LECs) were slightly fixed and treated with cytoskeleton extraction buffer. Detergent-extracted whole mounts of cultured cells were prepared for either scanning electron microscopy (SEM) or transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Extracted cells show an integral intricate cytoskeleton; sieve plates and fenestrae are delineated by cytoskeleton elements. Fenestrae are surrounded by a filamentous, fenestrae-associated cytoskeleton with a mean filament thickness of 16 nm. Sieve plates are surrounded and delineated by microtubuli, which form a network together with additional branching cytoskeletal elements. The addition of ethanol to cultured cells enlarged the diameter for these fenestrae-associated cytoskeleton rings by 5%, whereas serotonin treatment reduced the diameter by 20%. These observations indicate that the fenestrae-associated cytoskeleton probably changes the size of fenestrae after different treatments. After treatment with cytochalasin B the number of fenestrae increased. However, cytochalasin B did not change the structure of the fenestrae-associated cytoskeleton ring, but disperses the microtubuli. In conclusion, LECs have a cytoskeleton that defines and supports sieve plates and fenestrae. Fenestrae-associated cytoskeleton is a dynamic structure and plays a role in maintaining and regulating the size of fenestrae after different treatments. Therefore, the fenestrae-associated cytoskeleton controls the important hepatic function of endothelial filtration.

A novel structure involved in the formation of liver endothelial cell fenestrae revealed by using the actin inhibitor misakinolide
Filip Braet, Ilan Spector, Ronald De Zanger et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1998
Cited by 90Open Access

Hepatic endothelial fenestrae are dynamic structures that act as a sieving barrier to control the extensive exchange of material between the blood and the liver parenchyma. Alterations in the number or diameter of fenestrae by drugs, hormones, toxins, and diseases can produce serious perturbations in liver function. Previous studies have shown that disassembly of actin by cytochalasin B or latrunculin A caused a remarkable increase in the number of fenestrae and established the importance of the actin cytoskeleton in the numerical dynamics of fenestrae. So far, however, no mechanism or structure has been described to explain the increase in the number of fenestrae. Using the new actin inhibitor misakinolide, we observed a new structure that appears to serve as a fenestrae-forming center in hepatic endothelial cells.