Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences on calcified tissues

ba0006is11 | (1) (1) | ICCBH2017

IS11

van Leeuwen Hans

Abstract not submitted...

ba0006is11biog | (1) (1) | ICCBH2017

IS11

van Leeuwen Hans

Biographical DetailsHans van LeeuwenHans (J.P.T.M.) van Leeuwen studied biology in Amsterdam, and did his PhD study on the mechanism of action of PTH in Leiden, The Netherlands. Currently he is professor at the Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, leading the research program on Calcium and Bone Metabolism. Main research ...

ba0006is20 | (1) (1) | ICCBH2017

Canonical Wnt signaling in bone health and disease

Van Hul Wim

About two decades ago, evidence was generated that canonical Wnt signaling plays an important role in bone accrual mainly based on the identification of mutations in genes from the Wnt pathway resulting in extremely low or high bone mass. Since then, it became clear that genetic variation in a lot of genes from this pathway have an influence on bone mass both in a number of skeletal dysplasias as well as in the general population. This is the case for a number of wnt ligands (...

ba0006is20biog | (1) (1) | ICCBH2017

Canonical Wnt signaling in bone health and disease

Van Hul Wim

Biographical DetailsWim Van HulWim Van Hul is full professor of Molecular biology and genetics at the University of Antwerp, Belgium. He obtained a bachelor degree in Chemistry from the University of Louvain (Belgium) and a master degree in biochemistry. He obtained his PhD on molecular genetics in 1993 from the University of Antwerp. He started his...

ba0002p71 | (1) | ICCBH2013

The microarchitecture of bone in osteochondromas

Staal Heleen , van Rietbergen Bert , van Rhijn Lodewijk

Introduction: Hereditary multiple osteochondromas (HMO) is characterized by the outward growth of cartilage-capped bone tumors. Osteochondromas contain a bone marrow cavity continuous with the normal bone cavity. Because of their off-axis position, osteochondromas are expected to carry less load than normal bone tissue. According to Wolff’s law, we therefore hypothesized that osteochondromas would have a less developed, osteoporotic-like microstructure. To test this hypot...

ba0002is15 | Paediatric cancer and bone: round table | ICCBH2013

Osteogenic complications during and after childhood cancer

van den Heuvel-Eibrink Marry

Childhood cancer has become curable in the majority (>70%) of patients. This is mainly due to rising intensity of treatment, including (combinations of) surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy and stem cell transplantation. In addition, intensive international collaboration for rare subgroups, enhanced stratification for treatment regimens and optimised supportive care has contributed to the improved survival of pediatric cancer that was accomplished over the last decades....

ba0002is15biog | Paediatric cancer and bone: round table | ICCBH2013

Osteogenic complications during and after childhood cancer

van den Heuvel-Eibrink Marry

Biographical DetailsM van den Heuvel-Eibrink is Associate Professor of Pediatric Oncology at the Erasmus MC/Sophia Children’s Hospital, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. She began her medical career with an MD from the University of Utrecht and following a number of years of clinical work in the pediatric oncology field completed her PhD in Rotterdam in 2001. Since 2009 Dr M van den Heuvel...

ba0005s5.2 | Molecular Clocks | ECTS2016

Good times, bad times: (patho)physiology of diurnal rhythms

van der Horst Gijsbertus (Bert)

Like most organisms, we have developed an internal time keeping system that drives daily rhythms in metabolism, physiology and behavior, and allows us to optimally anticipate to the momentum of the day. At the basis of circadian timekeeping lies an intracellular molecular oscillator in which a set of clock genes cyclically regulate their own expression with an approximate (circa) 24-hour (dies) periodicity. The mammalian circadian system consists of a light-entrainable master ...

ba0003pp96 | Cancer and bone: basic, translational and clinical | ECTS2014

Osteoblast-secreted extracellular vesicles stimulate the expansion of CD34+ human umbilical cord blood cells

Morhayim Jess , Demmers Jeroen , van Wijnen Andre , Braakman Eric , Cornelissen Jan , de Peppel Jeroen van , van Leeuwen Hans

Introduction: Umbilical cord blood (UCB) is increasingly used in hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantations; however, the low cell numbers are still remaining as a limiting factor for proper engraftment. Osteoblasts are major constituents of HSC niche and play important roles in regulating HSC self-renewal and differentiation. Recently, extracellular vesicles (EVs) have been implicated in stem cell fate regulation via horizontal transfer of proteins and nucleic acids betwe...