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Featured researches published by Jeroen Van Daele.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2010

Ultra-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC–MS/MS) for the sensitive determination of folates in rice

Veerle De Brouwer; Sergei Storozhenko; Christophe P. Stove; Jeroen Van Daele; Dominique Van Der Straeten; Willy E. Lambert

High-performance liquid chromatography, coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS) has been established as the method of choice for the sensitive and simultaneous determination of different folates in a particular matrix, especially when only minute quantities of material are available. Using a previously developed and validated HPLC-MS/MS method as a starting point, we here report on the development and validation of an ultra-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC-MS/MS) method for analysis of folates in rice, which allows higher throughput and better resolution. UPLC was performed under gradient conditions on an Acquity HSS T3 column, followed by tandem mass spectrometry detection. The method was validated based on linearity, sensitivity, precision, accuracy and matrix effects. The limits of detection and the lower limits of quantification varied between 0.06 and 0.45 microg/100 g and 0.12 and 0.91 microg/100 g, respectively. Two linear calibration curves were established, one for the low and the other for the high concentration range. Analysis of the distribution and levels of folates in wild-type and folate-biofortified rice showed up to 50-fold enrichment in biofortified rice, with total folate levels of up to 900 microg/100 g rice. This is the first successful implementation of a UPLC method for the rapid and sensitive quantitative determination of folates in plant material.


Nature Biotechnology | 2015

Improving folate (vitamin B9) stability in biofortified rice through metabolic engineering.

Dieter Blancquaert; Jeroen Van Daele; Simon Strobbe; Filip Kiekens; Sergei Storozhenko; Hans De Steur; Xavier Gellynck; Willy E. Lambert; Christophe P. Stove; Dominique Van Der Straeten

Biofortification of staple crops could help to alleviate micronutrient deficiencies in humans. We show that folates in stored rice grains are unstable, which reduces the potential benefits of folate biofortification. We obtain folate concentrations that are up to 150 fold higher than those of wild-type rice by complexing folate to folate-binding proteins to improve folate stability, thereby enabling long-term storage of biofortified high-folate rice grains.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2013

Enhancing pterin and para-aminobenzoate content is not sufficient to successfully biofortify potato tubers and Arabidopsis thaliana plants with folate

Dieter Blancquaert; Sergei Storozhenko; Jeroen Van Daele; Christophe P. Stove; Richard G. F. Visser; Willy Lambert; Dominique Van Der Straeten

Folates are important cofactors in one-carbon metabolism in all living organisms. Since only plants and micro- organisms are capable of biosynthesizing folates, humans depend entirely on their diet as a folate source. Given the low folate content of several staple crop products, folate deficiency affects regions all over the world. Folate biofortification of staple crops through enhancement of pterin and para-aminobenzoate levels, precursors of the folate biosynthesis pathway, was reported to be successful in tomato and rice. This study shows that the same strategy is not sufficient to enhance folate content in potato tubers and Arabidopsis thaliana plants and concludes that other steps in folate biosynthesis and/or metabolism need to be engineered to result in substantial folate accumulation. The findings provide a plausible explanation why, more than half a decade after the proof of concept in rice and tomato, successful folate biofortification of other food crops through enhancement of para-aminobenzoate and pterin content has not been reported thus far. A better understanding of the folate pathway is required in order to determine an engineering strategy that can be generalized to most staple crops.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Inhibition of p-aminobenzoate and folate syntheses in plants and apicomplexan parasites by natural product rubreserine

Djeneb Camara; Cordelia Bisanz; Caroline Barette; Jeroen Van Daele; Esmare Human; Bernice Barnard; Dominique Van Der Straeten; Christophe P. Stove; Willy E. Lambert; Roland Douce; Eric Maréchal; Lyn-Marie Birkholtz; Marie-France Cesbron-Delauw; Renaud Dumas; Fabrice Rébeillé

Background: pABA biosynthesis is a potential target for antifolate drugs. Results: Rubreserine inhibits GAT-ADCS, an enzyme involved in pABA biosynthesis, and decreases the folate content in Arabidopsis and Toxoplasma. Conclusion: Specific inhibition of pABA synthesis induces growth limitation of plants and apicomplexan parasites. Significance: GAT-ADCS is a valuable target in eukaryotes, and rubreserine is a novel scaffold for anti-parasitic drugs. Glutamine amidotransferase/aminodeoxychorismate synthase (GAT-ADCS) is a bifunctional enzyme involved in the synthesis of p-aminobenzoate, a central component part of folate cofactors. GAT-ADCS is found in eukaryotic organisms autonomous for folate biosynthesis, such as plants or parasites of the phylum Apicomplexa. Based on an automated screening to search for new inhibitors of folate biosynthesis, we found that rubreserine was able to inhibit the glutamine amidotransferase activity of the plant GAT-ADCS with an apparent IC50 of about 8 μm. The growth rates of Arabidopsis thaliana, Toxoplasma gondii, and Plasmodium falciparum were inhibited by rubreserine with respective IC50 values of 65, 20, and 1 μm. The correlation between folate biosynthesis and growth inhibition was studied with Arabidopsis and Toxoplasma. In both organisms, the folate content was decreased by 40–50% in the presence of rubreserine. In both organisms, the addition of p-aminobenzoate or 5-formyltetrahydrofolate in the external medium restored the growth for inhibitor concentrations up to the IC50 value, indicating that, within this range of concentrations, rubreserine was specific for folate biosynthesis. Rubreserine appeared to be more efficient than sulfonamides, antifolate drugs known to inhibit the invasion and proliferation of T. gondii in human fibroblasts. Altogether, these results validate the use of the bifunctional GAT-ADCS as an efficient drug target in eukaryotic cells and indicate that the chemical structure of rubreserine presents interesting anti-parasitic (toxoplasmosis, malaria) potential.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2013

Rice folate enhancement through metabolic engineering has an impact on rice seed metabolism, but does not affect the expression of the endogenous folate biosynthesis genes

Dieter Blancquaert; Jeroen Van Daele; Sergei Storozhenko; Christophe P. Stove; Willy E. Lambert; Dominique Van Der Straeten

Folates are key-players in one-carbon metabolism in all organisms. However, only micro-organisms and plants are able to synthesize folates de novo and humans rely entirely on their diet as a sole folate source. As a consequence, folate deficiency is a global problem. Although different strategies are currently implemented to fight folate deficiency, up until now, all of them have their own drawbacks. As an alternative and complementary means to those classical strategies, folate biofortification of rice by metabolic engineering was successfully achieved a couple of years ago. To gain more insight into folate biosynthesis regulation and the effect of folate enhancement on general rice seed metabolism, a transcriptomic study was conducted in developing transgenic rice seeds, overexpressing 2 genes of the folate biosynthetic pathway. Upon folate enhancement, the expression of 235 genes was significantly altered. Here, we show that rice folate biofortification has an important effect on folate dependent, seed developmental and plant stress response/defense processes, but does not affect the expression of the endogenous folate biosynthesis genes.


Phytochemistry | 2012

A folate independent role for cytosolic HPPK/DHPS upon stress in Arabidopsis thaliana

Oscar Navarrete; Jeroen Van Daele; Christophe P. Stove; Willy Lambert; Dominique Van Der Straeten; Sergei Storozhenko

Cytosolic HPPK/DHPS (cytHPPK/DHPS) in Arabidopsis is a functional enzyme with activity similar to its mitochondrial isoform. Genomic complementation of the cytHPPK/DHPS knockout mutant with the wild type gene led to a complete rescue of the stress sensitive mutant phenotype in seed germination tests under abiotic stress conditions. Moreover, over-expression of the gene resulted in higher germination rate under stress as compared to the wild-type, confirming its role in stress resistance. Analysis of folates in seedlings, inflorescence and dry seeds showed unchanged levels in the wild-type, mutant and over-expressor line, upon stress and normal conditions, suggesting a role for cytHPPK/DHPS distinct from folate biosynthesis and a folate-independent stress resistance mechanism. This apparently folate-independent mechanism of stress resistance points towards a possible role of pterins, since the product of HPPK/DHPS is dihydropteroate.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2014

Folate Profiling in Potato (Solanum tuberosum) Tubers by Ultrahigh-Performance Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry.

Jeroen Van Daele; Dieter Blancquaert; Filip Kiekens; Dominique Van Der Straeten; Willy E. Lambert; Christophe P. Stove

An ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method was developed and validated for the profiling of six folate species in potatoes. The calibration curves cover a wide, linear range (the lower and upper limits of quantitation range between 0.22-0.24 and 216.07-242.28 μg/100 g of fresh weight), allowing sensitive determination in small amounts of potato flesh. With a single exception, the acceptance criteria for intra- and interday precision and accuracy were met: for all quality controls, the percent relative standard deviation and the percent bias were lower than 15% (or 20% at the lower limit of quantitation). Application of the method on tubers at different stages of maturation demonstrated the large variability within a single variety: the folate content and polyglutamylation rate varied between 10.35 and 24.01 μg/100 g of fresh weight and between 4.96% and 60.49%, respectively. Additionally, the two-dimensional folate profiling of mature tubers demonstrated an increase in folate from center to peel, combined with a stable species distribution and polyglutamylation rate.


Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2015

Folates from metabolically engineered rice: a long-term study in rats.

Filip Kiekens; Dieter Blancquaert; Lindsey Devisscher; Jeroen Van Daele; Veronique Stove; Joris R. Delanghe; Dominique Van Der Straeten; Willy E. Lambert; Christophe P. Stove

SCOPE The biological impact of folates from folate rice, a metabolically engineered (biofortified) rice line, rich in folates, was investigated. Its consumption may be helpful to fight folate deficiency. Our objective was to investigate the potential of folate rice to supply the organism with folates and evaluate its biological effectiveness using a rat model. METHODS AND RESULTS Five groups of 12 Wistar rats were monitored during a 7/12-wk depletion/repletion trial. Animals receiving folate-free diet (0 μg/rat/day) and those additionally receiving wild-type rice (on average 0.11 μg/rat/day) suffered from decreased hematocrit and lower folate concentrations in both plasma and RBCs. This resulted in serious morbidity and even lethality during the trial. In contrast, all animals receiving a daily supplement of folate rice or folic acid fortified rice (on average 3.00 μg/rat/day and 3.12 μg/rat/day, respectively) and those receiving a positive control diet (11.4 to 25.0 μg/rat/day), survived. In these groups, the hematocrit normalized, plasma and RBC folate concentrations increased and pronounced hyperhomocysteinemia was countered. CONCLUSION Using an animal model, we demonstrated that biofortified folate rice is a valuable source of dietary folate, as evidenced by folate determination in plasma and RBCs, the alleviation of anemia and counteraction of pronounced hyperhomocysteinemia.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2015

A validated ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method for the selective analysis of free and total folate in plasma and red blood cells.

Filip Kiekens; Jeroen Van Daele; Dieter Blancquaert; Dominique Van Der Straeten; Willy E. Lambert; Christophe P. Stove

A stable isotope dilution LC-MS/MS method is the method of choice for the selective quantitative determination of several folate species in clinical samples. By implementing an integrated approach to determine both the plasma and red blood cell (RBC) folate status, the use of consumables and time remains limited. Starting from a single 300μl whole blood sample, the folate status in plasma and RBCs can be determined after separating plasma and RBCs and sequential washing of the latter with isotonic buffer, followed by reproducible lysis using an ammonium-based buffer. Acidification combines both liberation of protein bound folates and protein precipitation. Sample cleanup is performed using a 96-well reversed-phase solid-phase extraction procedure, similar for both plasma and RBC samples. Analyses are performed by UHPLC-MS/MS. Method validation was successfully performed based on EMA-guidelines and encompassed selectivity, carry-over, linearity, accuracy, precision, recovery, matrix effect and stability. Plasma and RBC folates could be quantified in the range of 1-150nmol/l and 5-1500nmol/l, respectively. This method allows for the determination of 6 folate monoglutamates in both plasma and RBCs. It can be used to determine short and long term folate status in both normal and severely deficient subjects in a single analytical sequence.


The Plant Cell | 2017

Dihydrofolate Reductase/Thymidylate Synthase Fine-Tunes the Folate Status and Controls Redox Homeostasis in Plants

Vera Gorelova; Jolien De Lepeleire; Jeroen Van Daele; Dick Pluim; Coline Meï; Ann Cuypers; Olivier Leroux; Fabrice Rébeillé; Jan H. M. Schellens; Dieter Blancquaert; Christophe P. Stove; Dominique Van Der Straeten

The Arabidopsis DHFR-TS (dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase) isoform THY3 operates as an inhibitor of its family members, thereby regulating folate and NADPH availability in cells. Folates (B9 vitamins) are essential cofactors in one-carbon metabolism. Since C1 transfer reactions are involved in synthesis of nucleic acids, proteins, lipids, and other biomolecules, as well as in epigenetic control, folates are vital for all living organisms. This work presents a complete study of a plant DHFR-TS (dihydrofolate reductase-thymidylate synthase) gene family that implements the penultimate step in folate biosynthesis. We demonstrate that one of the DHFR-TS isoforms (DHFR-TS3) operates as an inhibitor of its two homologs, thus regulating DHFR and TS activities and, as a consequence, folate abundance. In addition, a novel function of folate metabolism in plants is proposed, i.e., maintenance of the redox balance by contributing to NADPH production through the reaction catalyzed by methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase, thus allowing plants to cope with oxidative stress.

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Cordelia Bisanz

Joseph Fourier University

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