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Dive into the research topics where I. Chaves is active.

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Featured researches published by I. Chaves.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2009

DNA Repair in Mammalian Cells

André P. M. Eker; C. Quayle; I. Chaves; G. T. J. van der Horst

Abstract.The genomic integrity of all living organisms is constantly jeopardized by physical [e.g. ultraviolet (UV) light, ionizing radiation] and chemical (e.g. environmental pollutants, endogenously produced reactive metabolites) agents that damage the DNA. To overcome the deleterious effects of DNA lesions, nature evolved a number of complex multi-protein repair processes with broad, partially overlapping substrate specificity. In marked contrast, cells may use very simple repair systems, referred to as direct DNA damage reversal, that rely on a single protein, remove lesions in a basically error-free manner, show high substrate specificity, and do not involve incision of the sugar-phosphate backbone or base excision. This concise review deals with two types of direct DNA damage reversal: (i) the repair of alkylating damage by alkyltransferases and dioxygenases, and (ii) the repair of UV-induced damage by spore photoproduct lyases and photolyases. (Part of a Multi-author Review)


Current Biology | 2014

Insulin-FOXO3 signaling modulates circadian rhythms via regulation of clock transcription

I. Chaves; Gijsbertus T. J. van der Horst; Raymond D. Schellevis; Romana Nijman; Marian J. A. Groot Koerkamp; Frank C. P. Holstege; Marten P. Smidt; Marco F.M. Hoekman

Circadian rhythms are responsive to external and internal cues, light and metabolism being among the most important. In mammals, the light signal is sensed by the retina and transmitted to the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) master clock [1], where it is integrated into the molecular oscillator via regulation of clock gene transcription. The SCN synchronizes peripheral oscillators, an effect that can be overruled by incoming metabolic signals [2]. As a consequence, peripheral oscillators can be uncoupled from the master clock when light and metabolic signals are not in phase. The signaling pathways responsible for coupling metabolic cues to the molecular clock are being rapidly uncovered [3-5]. Here we show that insulin-phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)-Forkhead box class O3 (FOXO3) signaling is required for circadian rhythmicity in the liver via regulation of Clock. Knockdown of FoxO3 dampens circadian amplitude, an effect that is rescued by overexpression of Clock. Subsequently, we show binding of FOXO3 to two Daf-binding elements (DBEs) located in the Clock promoter area, implicating Clock as a transcriptional target of FOXO3. Transcriptional oscillation of both core clock and output genes in the liver of FOXO3-deficient mice is affected, indicating a disrupted hepatic circadian rhythmicity. Finally, we show that insulin, a major regulator of FOXO activity [6-9], regulates Clock levels in a PI3K- and FOXO3-dependent manner. Our data point to a key role of the insulin-FOXO3-Clock signaling pathway in the modulation of circadian rhythms.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The Potorous CPD Photolyase Rescues a Cryptochrome-Deficient Mammalian Circadian Clock

I. Chaves; Romana Nijman; M.A. Biernat; Monika I. Bajek; Karl Brand; António Carvalho da Silva; Shoko Saito; Kazuhiro Yagita; André P. M. Eker; Gijsbertus T. J. van der Horst

Despite the sequence and structural conservation between cryptochromes and photolyases, members of the cryptochrome/photolyase (flavo)protein family, their functions are divergent. Whereas photolyases are DNA repair enzymes that use visible light to lesion-specifically remove UV-induced DNA damage, cryptochromes act as photoreceptors and circadian clock proteins. To address the functional diversity of cryptochromes and photolyases, we investigated the effect of ectopically expressed Arabidopsis thaliana (6-4)PP photolyase and Potorous tridactylus CPD-photolyase (close and distant relatives of mammalian cryptochromes, respectively), on the performance of the mammalian cryptochromes in the mammalian circadian clock. Using photolyase transgenic mice, we show that Potorous CPD-photolyase affects the clock by shortening the period of behavioral rhythms. Furthermore, constitutively expressed CPD-photolyase is shown to reduce the amplitude of circadian oscillations in cultured cells and to inhibit CLOCK/BMAL1 driven transcription by interacting with CLOCK. Importantly, we show that Potorous CPD-photolyase can restore the molecular oscillator in the liver of (clock-deficient) Cry1/Cry2 double knockout mice. These data demonstrate that a photolyase can act as a true cryptochrome. These findings shed new light on the importance of the core structure of mammalian cryptochromes in relation to its function in the circadian clock and contribute to our further understanding of the evolution of the cryptochrome/photolyase protein family.


Journal of Biological Rhythms | 2012

A baculovirus photolyase with DNA repair activity and circadian clock regulatory function.

M.A. Biernat; André P. M. Eker; Monique M. van Oers; Just M. Vlak; Gijsbertus T. J. van der Horst; I. Chaves

Cryptochromes and photolyases belong to the same family of flavoproteins but, despite being structurally conserved, display distinct functions. Photolyases use visible light to repair ultraviolet-induced DNA damage. Cryptochromes, however, function as blue-light receptors, circadian photoreceptors, or repressors of the CLOCK/BMAL1 heterodimer, the transcription activator controlling the molecular circadian clock. Here, we present evidence that the functional divergence between cryptochromes and photolyases is not so univocal. Chrysodeixis chalcites nucleopolyhedrovirus possesses 2 photolyase-like genes: phr1 and phr2. We show that PHR1 and PHR2 are able to bind the CLOCK protein. Only for PHR2, however, the physical interaction with CLOCK represses CLOCK/BMAL1-driven transcription. This result shows that binding of photolyase per se is not sufficient to inhibit the CLOCK/BMAL1 heterodimer. PHR2, furthermore, affects the oscillation of immortalized mouse embryonic fibroblasts, suggesting that PHR2 can regulate the molecular circadian clock. These findings are relevant for further understanding the evolution of cryptochromes and photolyases as well as behavioral changes induced in insects by baculoviruses.


Chronobiology International | 2017

Early- and late-onset preeclampsia and the DNA methylation of circadian clock and clock-controlled genes in placental and newborn tissues

C. B. van den Berg; I. Chaves; E. M. Herzog; Sten P. Willemsen; G. T. J. van der Horst; Régine P.M. Steegers-Theunissen

ABSTRACT The placenta is important in providing a healthy environment for the fetus and plays a central role in the pathophysiology of preeclampsia (PE). Fetal and placental developments are influenced by epigenetic programming. There is some evidence that PE is controlled to an altered circadian homeostasis. In a nested case–control study embedded in the Rotterdam Periconceptional Cohort, we obtained placental tissue, umbilical cord leukocytes (UCL), and human umbilical venous endothelial cells of 13 early-onset PE, 16 late-onset PE and 83 controls comprising 36 uncomplicated and 47 complicated pregnancies, i.e. 27 fetal growth restricted and 20 spontaneous preterm birth. To investigate the associations between PE and the epigenetics of circadian clock and clock-controlled genes in placental and newborn tissues, genome-wide DNA methylation analysis was performed using the Illumina HumanMethylation450K BeadChip and a candidate-gene approach using ANCOVA was applied on 939 CpGs of 39 circadian clock and clock-controlled genes. DNA methylation significantly differed in early-onset PE compared with spontaneous preterm birth at 6 CpGs in placental tissue (3.73E-5 ≤ p ≤ 0.016) and at 21 CpGs in UCL (1.09E-5≤ p ≤ 0.024). In early-onset PE compared with fetal growth restriction 2 CpGs in placental tissue (p < 0.05) and 8 CpGs in uncomplicated controls (4.78E-5≤ p ≤ 0.049) were significantly different. Moreover, significantly different DNA methylation in early-onset PE compared with uncomplicated controls was shown at 6 CpGs in placental tissue (1.36E-4≤ p ≤ 0.045) and 11 CpGs in uncomplicated controls (2.52E-6≤ p ≤ 0.009). No significant associations were shown with late-onset PE between study groups or tissues. The most differentially methylated CpGs showed hypomethylation in placental tissue and hypermethylation in uncomplicated controls. In conclusion, DNA methylation of circadian clock and clock-controlled genes demonstrated most differences in UCL of early-onset PE compared with spontaneous preterm birth. Implications of the tissue-specific variations in epigenetic programming for circadian performance and long-term health need further investigation.


Toxicogenomics-Based Cellular Models#R##N#Alternatives to Animal Testing for Safety Assessment | 2014

Hepatotoxicity and the Circadian Clock: A Timely Matter

Annelieke S. de Wit; Romana Nijman; Eugin Destici; I. Chaves; Gijsbertus T. J. van der Horst

In compliance with the societal demand to reduce and ultimately ban animal-based toxicity tests for chemical hazard identification and risk assessment, large-scale efforts are being undertaken to develop validated in vitro assays on the basis of risk profiles of ’omics-based biomarkers. Evidence is increasing that uptake, metabolism, and detoxification of chemicals is under control of the circadian clock and that, accordingly, the severity of toxic responses can depend on the time of day of exposure (chronotoxicity). Nonetheless, the involvement of the circadian clock in modulating toxicity is largely neglected. Here, focusing on the liver, we discuss the intimate link between the circadian clock and drug metabolism, detoxification, and other toxicity-related biological processes, as well as its impact on the outcome of in vivo and in vitro transcriptomics experiments. Moreover, we present a conceptually novel approach for toxicity/toxicogenomics assays that is not only expected to improve sensitivity and specificity, but will also provide insight into chronotoxic properties of chemicals.


Progress in Neurobiology | 2018

The circadian clock in adult neural stem cell maintenance

Swip Draijer; I. Chaves; Marco F.M. Hoekman

HighlightsThe circadian clock regulates maintenance of neural stem cells.Metabolism modulates both neural stem cell fates and circadian clock machinery.Disruption of the circadian clock causes loss of quiescence resulting indepletion of the neural stem cell population.We propose that the NAD+‐dependent deacetylase SIRT1 mediates neural stem cell fates by modulating the circadian clock. ABSTRACT Neural stem cells persist in the adult central nervous system as a continuing source of astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and neurons. Various signalling pathways and transcription factors actively maintain this population by regulating cell cycle entry and exit. Similarly, the circadian clock is interconnected with the cell cycle and actively maintains stem cell populations in various tissues. Here, we discuss emerging evidence for an important role of the circadian clock in neural stem cell maintenance. We propose that the NAD+‐dependent deacetylase SIRT1 exerts control over the circadian clock in adult neural stem cell function to limit exhaustion of their population. Conversely, disruption of the circadian clock may compromise neural stem cell quiescence resulting in a premature decline of the neural stem cell population. As such, energy metabolism and the circadian clock converge in adult neural stem cell maintenance.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2015

Circadian variation in tamoxifen pharmacokinetics in mice and breast cancer patients

Lisette Binkhorst; Jacqueline S. L. Kloth; Annelieke S. de Wit; Peter de Bruijn; Mei H. Lam; I. Chaves; Herman Burger; Robbert J. van Alphen; P. Hamberg; Ron H.N. van Schaik; Agnes Jager; Birgit C. P. Koch; Erik A.C. Wiemer; Teun van Gelder; Gijsbertus T. J. van der Horst; Ron H.J. Mathijssen


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2009

Direct DNA damage reversal: elegant solutions for nasty problems

André P. M. Eker; Carolina Quayle; I. Chaves; G. T. J. van der Horst


Abstract Book of the 46th Annual Meeting of the Society for Invertebrate Pathology, Pittsburg, 11-15 Augustus 2013 | 2013

Baculovirus photolyase and biological rhythm

M.A. Biernat; I. Chaves; J.M. Vlak; G.T.J. van der Horst; M.M. van Oers

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André P. M. Eker

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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G. T. J. van der Horst

Erasmus University Medical Center

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M.A. Biernat

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Romana Nijman

Erasmus University Medical Center

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Annelieke S. de Wit

Erasmus University Medical Center

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J.M. Vlak

International Livestock Research Institute

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Agnes Jager

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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