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Dive into the research topics where Matias J. Caldez is active.

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Featured researches published by Matias J. Caldez.


Current Biology | 2014

Identification of Transcriptional and Metabolic Programs Related to Mammalian Cell Size

Teemu P. Miettinen; Heli K.J. Pessa; Matias J. Caldez; Tobias Fuhrer; M. Kasim Diril; Uwe Sauer; Philipp Kaldis; Mikael Björklund

Summary Background Regulation of cell size requires coordination of growth and proliferation. Conditional loss of cyclin-dependent kinase 1 in mice permits hepatocyte growth without cell division, allowing us to study cell size in vivo using transcriptomics and metabolomics. Results Larger cells displayed increased expression of cytoskeletal genes but unexpectedly repressed expression of many genes involved in mitochondrial functions. This effect appears to be cell autonomous because cultured Drosophila cells induced to increase cell size displayed a similar gene-expression pattern. Larger hepatocytes also displayed a reduction in the expression of lipogenic transcription factors, especially sterol-regulatory element binding proteins. Inhibition of mitochondrial functions and lipid biosynthesis, which is dependent on mitochondrial metabolism, increased the cell size with reciprocal effects on cell proliferation in several cell lines. Conclusions We uncover that large cell-size increase is accompanied by downregulation of mitochondrial gene expression, similar to that observed in diabetic individuals. Mitochondrial metabolism and lipid synthesis are used to couple cell size and cell proliferation. This regulatory mechanism may provide a possible mechanism for sensing metazoan cell size.


Cancers | 2014

The Complex Relationship between Liver Cancer and the Cell Cycle: A Story of Multiple Regulations

Xavier Bisteau; Matias J. Caldez; Philipp Kaldis

The liver acts as a hub for metabolic reactions to keep a homeostatic balance during development and growth. The process of liver cancer development, although poorly understood, is related to different etiologic factors like toxins, alcohol, or viral infection. At the molecular level, liver cancer is characterized by a disruption of cell cycle regulation through many molecular mechanisms. In this review, we focus on the mechanisms underlying the lack of regulation of the cell cycle during liver cancer, focusing mainly on hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We also provide a brief summary of novel therapies connected to cell cycle regulation.


Haematologica | 2015

Hematopoiesis specific loss of Cdk2 and Cdk4 results in increased erythrocyte size and delayed platelet recovery following stress

Senthil Raja Jayapal; Chelsia Qiuxia Wang; Xavier Bisteau; Matias J. Caldez; Shuhui Lim; Vinay Tergaonkar; Motomi Osato; Philipp Kaldis

Mouse knockouts of Cdk2 and Cdk4 are individually viable whereas the double knockouts are embryonic lethal due to heart defects, and this precludes the investigation of their overlapping roles in definitive hematopoiesis. Here we use a conditional knockout mouse model to investigate the effect of combined loss of Cdk2 and Cdk4 in hematopoietic cells. Cdk2fl/flCdk4−/−vavCre mice are viable but displayed a significant increase in erythrocyte size. Cdk2fl/flCdk4−/−vavCre mouse bone marrow exhibited reduced phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein and reduced expression of E2F target genes such as cyclin A2 and Cdk1. Erythroblasts lacking Cdk2 and Cdk4 displayed a lengthened G1 phase due to impaired phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein. Deletion of the retinoblastoma protein rescued the increased size displayed by erythrocytes lacking Cdk2 and Cdk4, indicating that the retinoblastoma/Cdk2/Cdk4 pathway regulates erythrocyte size. The recovery of platelet counts following a 5-fluorouracil challenge was delayed in Cdk2fl/flCdk4−/−vavCre mice revealing a critical role for Cdk2 and Cdk4 in stress hematopoiesis. Our data indicate that Cdk2 and Cdk4 play important overlapping roles in homeostatic and stress hematopoiesis, which need to be considered when using broad-spectrum cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors for cancer therapy.


BioEssays | 2017

Cell size control – a mechanism for maintaining fitness and function

Teemu P. Miettinen; Matias J. Caldez; Philipp Kaldis; Mikael Björklund

The maintenance of cell size homeostasis has been studied for years in different cellular systems. With the focus on ‘what regulates cell size’, the question ‘why cell size needs to be maintained’ has been largely overlooked. Recent evidence indicates that animal cells exhibit nonlinear cell size dependent growth rates and mitochondrial metabolism, which are maximal in intermediate sized cells within each cell population. Increases in intracellular distances and changes in the relative cell surface area impose biophysical limitations on cells, which can explain why growth and metabolic rates are maximal in a specific cell size range. Consistently, aberrant increases in cell size, for example through polyploidy, are typically disadvantageous to cellular metabolism, fitness and functionality. Accordingly, cellular hypertrophy can potentially predispose to or worsen metabolic diseases. We propose that cell size control may have emerged as a guardian of cellular fitness and metabolic activity.


PLOS Genetics | 2016

Loss of the Greatwall Kinase Weakens the Spindle Assembly Checkpoint.

M. Kasim Diril; Xavier Bisteau; Mayumi Kitagawa; Matias J. Caldez; Sheena Wee; Jayantha Gunaratne; Sang Hyun Lee; Philipp Kaldis

The Greatwall kinase/Mastl is an essential gene that indirectly inhibits the phosphatase activity toward mitotic Cdk1 substrates. Here we show that although Mastl knockout (MastlNULL) MEFs enter mitosis, they progress through mitosis without completing cytokinesis despite the presence of misaligned chromosomes, which causes chromosome segregation defects. Furthermore, we uncover the requirement of Mastl for robust spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) maintenance since the duration of mitotic arrest caused by microtubule poisons in MastlNULL MEFs is shortened, which correlates with premature disappearance of the essential SAC protein Mad1 at the kinetochores. Notably, MastlNULL MEFs display reduced phosphorylation of a number of proteins in mitosis, which include the essential SAC kinase MPS1. We further demonstrate that Mastl is required for multi-site phosphorylation of MPS1 as well as robust MPS1 kinase activity in mitosis. In contrast, treatment of MastlNULL cells with the phosphatase inhibitor okadaic acid (OKA) rescues the defects in MPS1 kinase activity, mislocalization of phospho-MPS1 as well as Mad1 at the kinetochore, and premature SAC silencing. Moreover, using in vitro dephosphorylation assays, we demonstrate that Mastl promotes persistent MPS1 phosphorylation by inhibiting PP2A/B55-mediated MPS1 dephosphorylation rather than affecting Cdk1 kinase activity. Our findings establish a key regulatory function of the Greatwall kinase/Mastl->PP2A/B55 pathway in preventing premature SAC silencing.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2017

CDK10 Mutations in Humans and Mice Cause Severe Growth Retardation, Spine Malformations, and Developmental Delays

Christian Windpassinger; Juliette Piard; Carine Bonnard; Majid Alfadhel; Shuhui Lim; Xavier Bisteau; Stéphane Blouin; Nur’Ain B. Ali; Alvin Yu Jin Ng; Hao Lu; Sumanty Tohari; S. Zakiah A. Talib; Noémi van Hul; Matias J. Caldez; Lionel Van Maldergem; Gökhan Yigit; Hülya Kayserili; Sameh A. Youssef; Vincenzo Coppola; Alain de Bruin; Lino Tessarollo; Hyungwon Choi; Verena Rupp; Katharina M. Roetzer; Paul Roschger; Klaus Klaushofer; Janine Altmüller; Sudipto Roy; Byrappa Venkatesh; Rudolf Ganger

In five separate families, we identified nine individuals affected by a previously unidentified syndrome characterized by growth retardation, spine malformation, facial dysmorphisms, and developmental delays. Using homozygosity mapping, array CGH, and exome sequencing, we uncovered bi-allelic loss-of-function CDK10 mutations segregating with this disease. CDK10 is a protein kinase that partners with cyclin M to phosphorylate substrates such as ETS2 and PKN2 in order to modulate cellular growth. To validate and model the pathogenicity of these CDK10 germline mutations, we generated conditional-knockout mice. Homozygous Cdk10-knockout mice died postnatally with severe growth retardation, skeletal defects, and kidney and lung abnormalities, symptoms that partly resemble the diseases effect in humans. Fibroblasts derived from affected individuals and Cdk10-knockout mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) proliferated normally; however, Cdk10-knockout MEFs developed longer cilia. Comparative transcriptomic analysis of mutant and wild-type mouse organs revealed lipid metabolic changes consistent with growth impairment and altered ciliogenesis in the absence of CDK10. Our results document the CDK10 loss-of-function phenotype and point to a function for CDK10 in transducing signals received at the primary cilia to sustain embryonic and postnatal development.


Cell Cycle | 2016

Cyclin A2 regulates erythrocyte morphology and numbers

Senthil Raja Jayapal; Heather Yin-Kuan Ang; Chelsia Qiuxia Wang; Xavier Bisteau; Matias J. Caldez; Gan Xiao Xuan; Weimiao Yu; Vinay Tergaonkar; Motomi Osato; Bing Lim; Philipp Kaldis

ABSTRACT Cyclin A2 is an essential gene for development and in haematopoietic stem cells and therefore its functions in definitive erythropoiesis have not been investigated. We have ablated cyclin A2 in committed erythroid progenitors in vivo using erythropoietin receptor promoter-driven Cre, which revealed its critical role in regulating erythrocyte morphology and numbers. Erythroid-specific cyclin A2 knockout mice are viable but displayed increased mean erythrocyte volume and reduced erythrocyte counts, as well as increased frequency of erythrocytes containing Howell-Jolly bodies. Erythroblasts lacking cyclin A2 displayed defective enucleation, resulting in reduced production of enucleated erythrocytes and increased frequencies of erythrocytes containing nuclear remnants. Deletion of the Cdk inhibitor p27Kip1 but not Cdk2, ameliorated the erythroid defects resulting from deficiency of cyclin A2, confirming the critical role of cyclin A2/Cdk activity in erythroid development. Loss of cyclin A2 in bone marrow cells in semisolid culture prevented the formation of BFU-E but not CFU-E colonies, uncovering its essential role in BFU-E function. Our data unveils the critical functions of cyclin A2 in regulating mammalian erythropoiesis.


Developmental Cell | 2018

Metabolic Remodeling during Liver Regeneration

Matias J. Caldez; Noémi van Hul; Hiromi Koh; Xing Qi Teo; Jun Jun Fan; Peck Yean Tan; Matthew R. Dewhurst; Peh Gek Too; S. Zakiah A. Talib; Beatrice E. Chiang; Walter Stünkel; Hanry Yu; Philip Teck Hock Lee; Tobias Fuhrer; Hyungwon Choi; Mikael Björklund; Philipp Kaldis


Journal of Hepatology | 2017

Hepatocyte polyploidy in response to loss of Cdk1 induces chronic hepatic inflammation and progenitor cell activation

M. Dewhurst; N.V. Hul; Matias J. Caldez; Philipp Kaldis


Journal of Hepatology | 2016

Fueling Cellular Division during Liver Regeneration: CDK1 Regulates Energy Metabolism by Directing the Flux of Pyruvate

Matias J. Caldez; N. Van Hul; Xing Qi Teo; Tobias Fuhrer; J.J. Fan; Peck Yean Tan; Walter Stünkel; H. Yu; M. Bjorklund; U. Sauer; Philip Teck Hock Lee; Philipp Kaldis

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Philipp Kaldis

National University of Singapore

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Chelsia Qiuxia Wang

National University of Singapore

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Hyungwon Choi

National University of Singapore

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Motomi Osato

National University of Singapore

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