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Dive into the research topics where Chiel C. de Theije is active.

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Featured researches published by Chiel C. de Theije.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Requirement of Nuclear Factor of Activated T-cells in Calcineurin-mediated Cardiomyocyte Hypertrophy

Eva van Rooij; Pieter A. Doevendans; Chiel C. de Theije; Fawzi A. Babiker; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Leon J. De Windt

The calcium-activated phosphatase calcineurin has been implicated as a critical intracellular signal transducer of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. Although previous data suggested the nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT) as its sole transcriptional effector, the absolute requirement of NFAT as a mediator of calcineurin signaling has not been examined in the heart. We therefore investigated the expression and activation profile of NFAT genes in the heart. Four members (NFATc1–c4) are expressed in cardiomyocytes, elicit nuclear translocation upon calcineurin activation, and are able to drive transactivation of cardiac promoter luciferase constructs. To define the necessary function of NFAT factors as hypertrophic transducers, a dominant negative NFAT construct was created, encompassing part of the N-terminal region of NFATc4 containing a conserved calcineurin-binding motif. Cotransfection of this construct dose-dependently abrogated promoter activation, irrespective of the NFAT isoform used, whereas a control construct with the calcineurin-binding motif mutated displayed no such effects. Adenoviral gene transfer of dominant negative NFAT rendered cardiomyocytes resistant toward all aspects of calcineurin or agonist-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, whereas adenoviral gene transfer of the control construct had no discernable effect on these parameters. These results indicate that multiple NFAT isoforms are expressed in cardiomyocytes where they function as necessary transducers of calcineurin in facilitating cardiomyocyte hypertrophy.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2013

Nuclear transcription factor κ B activation and protein turnover adaptations in skeletal muscle of patients with progressive stages of lung cancer cachexia

Céline M. H. Op den Kamp; Ramon Langen; Frank J. M. Snepvangers; Chiel C. de Theije; Johanna M Schellekens; Fabian Laugs; Anne-Marie C. Dingemans; Annemie M. W. J. Schols

BACKGROUND Experimental models of cancer cachexia have indicated that systemic inflammation induces muscle-protein breakdown and wasting via muscular nuclear transcription factor κB (NF-κB) activation. This process may limit the efficacy of nutritional intervention. OBJECTIVES We assessed muscle NF-κB activity and protein turnover signaling in progressive stages of clinical lung cancer cachexia and assessed whether circulating factors can induce muscular NF-κB activity. DESIGN Patients with lung cancer precachexia (n = 10) and cachexia (n = 16) were cross-sectionally compared with 22 healthy control subjects. mRNA transcripts of muscle proteolytic (ubiquitin proteasome system and autophagy lysosomal pathway) and myogenic markers and protein expression of PI3K/Akt, myostatin, and autophagy signaling were measured. A multiplex analysis showed the systemic inflammatory status, whereas plasma exposure to stable NF-κB-luciferase-reporter muscle cells revealed NF-κB inducibility. RESULTS Compared with healthy control subjects, cachectic patients had reduced (appendicular) muscle mass (-10%), muscle fiber atrophy (-27%), and decreased quadriceps strength (-31%). Subtle alterations in the muscle morphology were also detectable in precachectic patients, without changes in body composition. Despite increased Akt phosphorylation, downstream phosphosubstrates glycogen synthase kinase 3β, mammalian target of rapamycin, and Forkhead box protein were unaltered. The expression of autophagy effectors B cell lymphoma 2/adenovirus E1B 19-kDa protein-interacting protein 3 and microtubule-associated proteins 1A/1B light chain 3B gradually increased from precachectic to cachectic patients, without differences in E3 ubiquitin ligases. Systemic and local inflammation was evident in cachexia and intermediate in precachexia, but the plasma of both patients groups caused ex vivo muscle NF-κB activation. CONCLUSIONS In lung cancer, muscular NF-κB activity is induced by factors contained within the circulation. Autophagy may contribute to increased muscle proteolysis in lung cancer cachexia, whereas the absence of downstream changes in phosphosubstrates despite increased Akt phosphorylation suggests impaired anabolic signaling that may require targeted nutritional intervention.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Glutamine synthetase in muscle is required for glutamine production during fasting and extrahepatic ammonia detoxification.

Youji He; Theodorus B. M. Hakvoort; S. Eleonore Köhler; Jacqueline L. M. Vermeulen; D. Rudi de Waart; Chiel C. de Theije; Gabrie A.M. Ten Have; Hans M.H. van Eijk; Cindy Kunne; W. T. Labruyere; Sander M. Houten; Milka Sokolovic; Jan M. Ruijter; Nicolaas E. P. Deutz; Wouter H. Lamers

The main endogenous source of glutamine is de novo synthesis in striated muscle via the enzyme glutamine synthetase (GS). The mice in which GS is selectively but completely eliminated from striated muscle with the Cre-loxP strategy (GS-KO/M mice) are, nevertheless, healthy and fertile. Compared with controls, the circulating concentration and net production of glutamine across the hindquarter were not different in fed GS-KO/M mice. Only a ∼3-fold higher escape of ammonia revealed the absence of GS in muscle. However, after 20 h of fasting, GS-KO/M mice were not able to mount the ∼4-fold increase in glutamine production across the hindquarter that was observed in control mice. Instead, muscle ammonia production was ∼5-fold higher than in control mice. The fasting-induced metabolic changes were transient and had returned to fed levels at 36 h of fasting. Glucose consumption and lactate and ketone-body production were similar in GS-KO/M and control mice. Challenging GS-KO/M and control mice with intravenous ammonia in stepwise increments revealed that normal muscle can detoxify ∼2.5 μmol ammonia/g muscle·h in a muscle GS-dependent manner, with simultaneous accumulation of urea, whereas GS-KO/M mice responded with accumulation of glutamine and other amino acids but not urea. These findings demonstrate that GS in muscle is dispensable in fed mice but plays a key role in mounting the adaptive response to fasting by transiently facilitating the production of glutamine. Furthermore, muscle GS contributes to ammonia detoxification and urea synthesis. These functions are apparently not vital as long as other organs function normally.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2013

Characterization of the inflammatory and metabolic profile of adipose tissue in a mouse model of chronic hypoxia

Bram van den Borst; Annemie M. W. J. Schols; Chiel C. de Theije; Agnes W. Boots; S. Eleonore Köhler; Gijs H. Goossens; Harry R. Gosker

In both obesity and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), altered oxygen tension in adipose tissue (AT) has been suggested to evoke AT dysfunction, subsequently contributing to metabolic complications. Studying the effects of chronic hypoxia on AT function will add to our understanding of the complex pathophysiology of alterations in AT inflammation, metabolism, and mass observed in both obesity and COPD. This study investigated the inflammatory and metabolic profile of AT after chronic hypoxia. Fifty-two-week-old C57Bl/6J mice were exposed to chronic hypoxia (8% O2) or normoxia for 21 days, after which AT and plasma were collected. Adipocyte size, AT gene expression of inflammatory and metabolic genes, AT macrophage density, and circulating adipokine concentrations were measured. Food intake and body weight decreased upon initiation of hypoxia. However, whereas food intake normalized after 10 days, lower body weight persisted. Chronic hypoxia markedly reduced AT mass and adipocyte size. AT macrophage density and expression of Emr1, Ccl2, Lep, and Tnf were decreased, whereas Serpine1 and Adipoq expression levels were increased after chronic hypoxia. Concomitantly, chronic hypoxia increased AT expression of regulators of oxidative metabolism and markers of mitochondrial function and lipolysis. Circulating IL-6 and PAI-1 concentrations were increased, and leptin concentration was decreased after chronic hypoxia. Chronic hypoxia is associated with decreased rather than increased AT inflammation, and markedly decreased fat mass and adipocyte size. Furthermore, our data indicate that chronic hypoxia is accompanied by significant alterations in AT metabolic gene expression, pointing toward an enhanced AT metabolic rate.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2013

Distinct responses of protein turnover regulatory pathways in hypoxia- and semistarvation-induced muscle atrophy

Chiel C. de Theije; Ramon Langen; Wouter H. Lamers; Annemie M. W. J. Schols; S. Eleonore Köhler

The balance of muscle protein synthesis and degradation determines skeletal muscle mass. We hypothesized that hypoxia-induced muscle atrophy and alterations in the regulation of muscle protein turnover include a hypoxia-specific component, in addition to the observed effects of reduction in food intake in response to hypoxia. Mice were subjected to normoxic, hypoxic (8% oxygen), or pair-fed conditions for 2, 4, and 21 days. Cell-autonomous effects of hypoxia on skeletal muscle were also assessed in differentiated C2C12 myotubes. Hypoxia induced an initial rapid loss of body and muscle weight, which remained decreased during chronic hypoxia and could only in part be explained by the hypoxia-induced reduction of food intake (semistarvation). Regulatory steps of protein synthesis (unfolded protein response and mammal target of rapamycin signaling) remained active in response to acute and sustained hypoxia but not to semistarvation. Activation of regulatory signals for protein degradation, including increased expression of Murf1, Atrogin-1, Bnip3, and Map1lc3b mRNAs, was observed in response to acute hypoxia and to a lesser extent following semistarvation. Conversely, the sustained elevation of Atrogin-1, Bnip3, and Map1lc3b mRNAs and the increased activity of their upstream transcriptional regulator Forkhead box O1 were specific to chronic hypoxia because they were not observed in response to reduced food intake. In conclusion, altered regulation of protein turnover during hypoxia-induced muscle atrophy resulted from an interaction of semistarvation and a hypoxia-specific component. The finding that food restriction but not hypoxia-induced semistarvation inhibited regulatory steps in protein synthesis suggests a hypoxia-specific impairment of the coordination between protein-synthesis signaling and protein-degradation signaling in skeletal muscle.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2015

Muscle-specific GSK-3β ablation accelerates regeneration of disuse-atrophied skeletal muscle

Nicholas A.M. Pansters; Annemie M. W. J. Schols; Koen Verhees; Chiel C. de Theije; Frank J. M. Snepvangers; Marco Kelders; Niki D.J. Ubags; Astrid Haegens; Ramon Langen

Muscle wasting impairs physical performance, increases mortality and reduces medical intervention efficacy in chronic diseases and cancer. Developing proficient intervention strategies requires improved understanding of the molecular mechanisms governing muscle mass wasting and recovery. Involvement of muscle protein- and myonuclear turnover during recovery from muscle atrophy has received limited attention. The insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I signaling pathway has been implicated in muscle mass regulation. As glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3) is inhibited by IGF-I signaling, we hypothesized that muscle-specific GSK-3β deletion facilitates the recovery of disuse-atrophied skeletal muscle. Wild-type mice and mice lacking muscle GSK-3β (MGSK-3β KO) were subjected to a hindlimb suspension model of reversible disuse-induced muscle atrophy and followed during recovery. Indices of muscle mass, protein synthesis and proteolysis, and post-natal myogenesis which contribute to myonuclear accretion, were monitored during the reloading of atrophied muscle. Early muscle mass recovery occurred more rapidly in MGSK-3β KO muscle. Reloading-associated changes in muscle protein turnover were not affected by GSK-3β ablation. However, coherent effects were observed in the extent and kinetics of satellite cell activation, proliferation and myogenic differentiation observed during reloading, suggestive of increased myonuclear accretion in regenerating skeletal muscle lacking GSK-3β. This study demonstrates that muscle mass recovery and post-natal myogenesis from disuse-atrophy are accelerated in the absence of GSK-3β.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2013

Ablation of Arg1 in hematopoietic cells improves respiratory function of lung parenchyma, but not that of larger airways or inflammation in asthmatic mice

Roy H. E. Cloots; Selvakumari Sankaranarayanan; Chiel C. de Theije; Matthew E. Poynter; Els Terwindt; Paul van Dijk; Theodorus B. M. Hakvoort; Wouter H. Lamers; S. Eleonore Köhler

Asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the small airways, with airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) and inflammation as hallmarks. Recent studies suggest a role for arginase in asthma pathogenesis, possibly because arginine is the substrate for both arginase and NO synthase and because NO modulates bronchial tone and inflammation. Our objective was to investigate the importance of increased pulmonary arginase 1 expression on methacholine-induced AHR and lung inflammation in a mouse model of allergic asthma. Arginase 1 expression in the lung was ablated by crossing Arg1(fl/fl) with Tie2Cre(tg/-) mice. Mice were sensitized and then challenged with ovalbumin. Lung function was measured with the Flexivent. Adaptive changes in gene expression, chemokine and cytokine secretion, and lung histology were quantified with quantitative PCR, ELISA, and immunohistochemistry. Arg1 deficiency did not affect the allergic response in lungs and large-airway resistance, but it improved peripheral lung function (tissue elastance and resistance) and attenuated adaptive increases in mRNA expression of arginine-catabolizing enzymes Arg2 and Nos2, arginine transporters Slc7a1 and Slc7a7, chemokines Ccl2 and Ccl11, cytokines Tnfa and Ifng, mucus-associated epithelial markers Clca3 and Muc5ac, and lung content of IL-13 and CCL11. However, expression of Il4, Il5, Il10, and Il13 mRNA; lung content of IL-4, IL-5, IL-10, TNF-α, and IFN-γ protein; and lung pathology were not affected. Correlation analysis showed that Arg1 ablation disturbed the coordinated pulmonary response to ovalbumin challenges, suggesting arginine (metabolite) dependence of this response. Arg1 ablation in the lung improved peripheral lung function and affected arginine metabolism but had little effect on airway inflammation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Arginine Deficiency Causes Runting in the Suckling Period by Selectively Activating the Stress Kinase GCN2

Vincent Marion; Selvakumari Sankaranarayanan; Chiel C. de Theije; Paul van Dijk; Patrick Lindsey; Marinus C. Lamers; Heather P. Harding; David Ron; Wouter H. Lamers; S. Eleonore Köhler

Suckling “F/A2” mice, which overexpress arginase-I in their enterocytes, develop a syndrome (hypoargininemia, reduced hair and muscle growth, impaired B-cell maturation) that resembles IGF1 deficiency. The syndrome may result from an impaired function of the GH-IGF1 axis, activation of the stress-kinase GCN2, and/or blocking of the mTORC1-signaling pathway. Arginine deficiency inhibited GH secretion and decreased liver Igf1 mRNA and plasma IGF1 concentration, but did not change muscle IGF1 concentration. GH supplementation induced Igf1 mRNA synthesis, but did not restore growth, ruling out direct involvement of the GH-IGF1 axis. In C2C12 muscle cells, arginine withdrawal activated GCN2 signaling, without impacting mTORC1 signaling. In F/A2 mice, the reduction of plasma and tissue arginine concentrations to ∼25% of wild-type values activated GCN2 signaling, but mTORC1-mediated signaling remained unaffected. Gcn2-deficient F/A2 mice suffered from hypoglycemia and died shortly after birth. Because common targets of all stress kinases (eIF2α phosphorylation, Chop mRNA expression) were not increased in these mice, the effects of arginine deficiency were solely mediated by GCN2.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2016

Alterations in Skeletal Muscle Oxidative Phenotype in Mice Exposed to 3 Weeks of Normobaric Hypoxia.

Ilse G.M. Slot; Annemie M. W. J. Schols; Chiel C. de Theije; Frank J. M. Snepvangers; Harry R. Gosker

Skeletal muscle of patients with chronic respiratory failure is prone to loss of muscle mass and oxidative phenotype. Tissue hypoxia has been associated with cachexia and emphysema in humans. Experimental research on the role of hypoxia in loss of muscle oxidative phenotype, however, has yielded inconsistent results. Animal studies are frequently performed in young animals, which may hinder translation to generally older aged patients. Therefore, in this study, we tested the hypothesis that hypoxia induces loss of skeletal muscle oxidative phenotype in a model of aged (52 weeks) mice exposed to 3 weeks of hypoxia. Additional groups of young (4 weeks) and adult (12 weeks) mice were included to examine age effects. To verify hypoxia‐induced cachexia, fat pad and muscle weights as well as muscle fiber cross‐sectional areas were determined. Muscle oxidative phenotype was assessed by expression and activity of markers of mitochondrial metabolism and fiber‐type distribution. A profound loss of muscle and fat was indeed accompanied by a slightly lower expression of markers of muscle oxidative capacity in the aged hypoxic mice. In contrast, hypoxia‐associated changes of fiber‐type composition were more prominent in the young mice. The differential response of the muscle of young, adult, and aged mice to hypoxia suggests that age matters and that the aged mouse is a better model for translation of findings to elderly patients with chronic respiratory disease. Furthermore, the findings warrant further mechanistic research into putative accelerating effects of hypoxia‐induced loss of oxidative phenotype on the cachexia process in chronic respiratory disease. J. Cell. Physiol. 231: 377–392, 2016.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Hepatic Adaptation Compensates Inactivation of Intestinal Arginine Biosynthesis in Suckling Mice

Vincent Marion; Selvakumari Sankaranarayanan; Chiel C. de Theije; Paul van Dijk; Theo B. M. Hakvoort; Wouter H. Lamers; Eleonore S. Köhler

Suckling mammals, including mice, differ from adults in the abundant expression of enzymes that synthesize arginine from citrulline in their enterocytes. To investigate the importance of the small-intestinal arginine synthesis for whole-body arginine production in suckling mice, we floxed exon 13 of the argininosuccinate synthetase (Ass) gene, which codes for a key enzyme in arginine biosynthesis, and specifically and completely ablated Ass in enterocytes by crossing Ass fl and Villin-Cre mice. Unexpectedly, Ass fl/fl /VilCre tg/- mice showed no developmental impairments. Amino-acid fluxes across the intestine, liver, and kidneys were calculated after determining the blood flow in the portal vein, and hepatic and renal arteries (86%, 14%, and 33%, respectively, of the transhepatic blood flow in 14-day-old mice). Relative to control mice, citrulline production in the splanchnic region of Ass fl/fl /VilCre tg/- mice doubled, while arginine production was abolished. Furthermore, the net production of arginine and most other amino acids in the liver of suckling control mice declined to naught or even changed to consumption in Ass fl/fl /VilCre tg/- mice, and had, thus, become remarkably similar to that of post-weaning wild-type mice, which no longer express arginine-biosynthesizing enzymes in their small intestine. The adaptive changes in liver function were accompanied by an increased expression of genes involved in arginine metabolism (Asl, Got1, Gpt2, Glud1, Arg1, and Arg2) and transport (Slc25a13, Slc25a15, and Slc3a2), whereas no such changes were found in the intestine. Our findings suggest that the genetic premature deletion of arginine synthesis in enterocytes causes a premature induction of the post-weaning pattern of amino-acid metabolism in the liver.

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Annemie M. W. J. Schols

Maastricht University Medical Centre

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Frank J. M. Snepvangers

Maastricht University Medical Centre

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