This is a summary of the curriculum vitae (CV) of Dr. Menno Oudhoff, Associate Professor, Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada. On September 30, he will give a presentation at Fujita Health University.
Dr. Oudhoff is from the Netherlands, where he got his master’s degree in Biology in 2006 (he is still young), and from then has had a number of exciting research positions studying mucosal tissues in the Netherlands, Canada, Norway, South Africa, and now again Canada. He is definitely “up and coming,” with, even within 2021-2022 alone, publications as last author in journals like Science Immunology, Cell Host & Microbe, Nature Communications, and PLoS Pathogens.
He was brought to my attention as an excellent speaker by Prof. Jim Kaufman, whom many of you know as a previous speaker and a regular visitor of our seminars. Knowing how critical Prof. Kaufman is, I am sure about Dr. Oudhoff’s ability to give an engaging presentation.
After completing his MSc degree in Biology in 2006, Dr. Oudhoff did his PhD at the Department of Oral Biochemistry (VU University, Amsterdam) under supervision of Dr. Enno Veerman. There, he showed that histatins, salivary peptides, not only have antimicrobial activity but also promote wound healing by affecting epithelial cell behavior (Oudhoff et al. 2008). The interplay at our mucosal barriers between the immune system, cell growth, and tissue homeostasis/formation has intrigued him ever since. Naturally, because of his interest in these overlap functions, the arm of the immune system that he would often encounter in his research is “Type 2” immunity, which fights helminths (parasitic worms) but also promotes wound repair and, unfortunately, tumor growth.
From 2011 to 2016, as a postdoctoral researcher, he joined the Mucosal Immunology lab of Dr. Colby Zaph at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, to study another mucosal organ, the intestine. Like the oral cavity, also the intestine is characterized by rapidly growing epithelial cells (with a turnover rate of about five days) and the necessity to maintain homeostasis (be stable and tolerant) in the presence of foreign food particles and commensal microorganisms. In Vancouver, Dr. Oudhoff’s initial focus was on intestinal helminth infection, but he soon also became interested in the cellular pathways that promote cell regeneration (replacing of dying cells by new cells derived from stem cells) and cancer. In this period, he found that Set7, a lysine methyltransferase, promotes the Hippo and Wnt pathways of cell proliferation, and is important for regeneration and cancer formation of intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) (Oudhoff et al. 2013; 2016a). Furthermore, he found that Set7 was important for the Type 2 immune defense mechanism of expelling helminth worms by increased turnover rates of IECs (Oudhoff et al. 2016b).
Dr. Oudhoff’s achievements in Vancouver landed him, in 2016, a position as group leader at the Centre for Molecular Inflammation Research (CEMIR) at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway, where he worked until very recently. In Norway, his major research topic remained the intestinal barrier function, focusing on interactions between immune factors and IEC cell phenotypes (e.g., Parmar et al. 2021; Drurey et al. 2022; Lindholm et al. 2022). During his Norway period, he also spent seven months in the lab of Dr. William Horsnell, University of Cape Town, South Africa, participating in work on helminths.
Just a few months ago, this year, he returned to Canada to become an associate professor at Carleton University in Ottawa. His main interests there remain intestinal mucosal immunology and IEC biology, with also an accent now on how the intestine develops and changes during our first year of life.
Mucosal barriers, where immune functions interplay with rapidly dividing epithelial cells and—depending on the organ—large numbers of commensal microorganisms, are a critical part of our bodies. It should be great to have someone like Dr. Oudhoff explain about this.
CURRICULUM VITAE
EDUCATION:
2006 MSc degree, Biology, Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences, VU University, Amsterdam, NL.
2010 PhD degree (December 7th, 2010). Enno C.I. Veerman (supervisor) Faculty of Dentistry, Department of Oral Biochemistry, VU University, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (NL)
Thesis Title: Discovery of the wound-healing capacity of salivary histatins.
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE:
2011-2016 Postdoctoral researcher, The Biomedical Research Centre, University of British Columbia (UBC), Vancouver, Canada. Colby Zaph (supervisor)
2016 – 2022 Group Leader, Centre for Molecular Inflammation Research (CEMIR), Department of Clinical and Molecular Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway
2020 Visiting Researcher, Laboratory of Parasite Immune Regulation (Dr. William Horsnell), University of Cape Town, South Africa (7 months)
2022 – now Associate Professor, Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Science, Carleton University
CAREER DEVELOPMENT:
2017-2021 Outstanding Fellow program (NTNU), 3 two-day retreats each year covering various aspects in professional development 2020 ERC workshop Sex and Gender dimension in Frontier research (1 day)
2017 EMBO Laboratory Leadership Course (4 days), Heidelberg, Germany 2016 PhD supervisor workshop (2 days), NTNU, Norway
AWARDS
2006 Scholarship award, 1 week, PhD course ‘regeneration of epidermal-mesenchymal organs’ COST Action B23, Paris, France
2008 IOT-Glaxo Smith Klein Best Presentation Award, Research days for Dutch Dentistry, The Netherlands
2011 Best research publication award, Dutch Society for Oral Biology, The Netherlands
2013 Young Investigator Travel Award, 16th International Congress of Mucosal Immunology, Vancouver, BC, Canada
2014 Travel Award Till and McCulloch Meeting, Ottawa, ON, Canada
2015 Travel Award Till and McCulloch Meeting, Toronto, ON, Canada
REVIEWER FUNCTIONS:
Dr. Oudhoff has acted as a reviewer for the following journals: Nature Chemical Biology, Mucosal Immunology, Parasites, eLife, Stem Cell Reports, Cellular and Molecular Immunology, FASEB Journal, Journal of Ophthalmology, Journal of Immunology Research, and Placenta.
PUBLICATIONS
Perspectives / Commentaries (not peer-reviewed)
Peer reviewed publications:
10. Gómez-Escudero J, Moreno V, Martín-Alonso M, Hernández-Riquer V, Feinberg T, Colmenar Á, Calvo E, Camafeita E, Martínez F, Oudhoff MJ, Weiss SJ, Arroyo AG. E-Cadherin cleavage by MT2-MMP regulates apical junctional signaling and epithelial homeostasis in the intestine. J. Cell Science. 2017 130 (23), 4013-4027. (image was selected for the cover)
11. Oudhoff MJ*† , Antignano F*, Chenery AL, Braam MJ, Zaph C† . Intestinal epithelial cellintrinsic deletion of Setd7 identifies crucial roles for developmental pathways in immunity against parasitic and bacterial infections. PLoS Pathogens 2016 Sep 6; 12(9): e1005876. *equal contribution † co-corresponding
Book chapter
1. van ‘t Hof W, Oudhoff MJ, Veerman ECI (2013) Chapter 9: Histatins: multifunctional salivary antimicrobial peptides (Springer Basel AG). Antimicrobial peptides and innate immunity (Edited by Drs. P.S. Hiemstra and S.A. Zaat)