Institut de Duve Avenue Hippocrate 74 - B1.74.11 1200 Bruxelles
The van Gastel Lab studies how metabolites control the behavior of normal and malignant stem cells.
What role do metabolites play in intra- and intercellular signaling in the bone marrow, and how is this altered in cancer?
Metabolic signaling is an evolutionary ancient way for cells to respond to exogenous stimuli and to convey information to nearby cells, but the extent and importance of this signaling mechanism in mammalian cells is not well understood.
Nick van Gastel and his lab focus on understanding the metabolic signaling taking place in the bone marrow, where billions of new blood cells are made every day. The correct functioning of this process relies not only on blood stem cells, but also on their interactions with other cell types in the bone marrow microenvironment such as bone cells, blood vessel cells, immune cells and connective tissue cells. Using state-of-the-art metabolic analysis techniques in combination with cell and animal models, the lab aims to unravel the metabolic crosstalk occurring between blood cells and their microenvironment, and how it changes when cancer cells are present. Other efforts are focused on intracellular metabolism, studying which metabolic pathways are important for normal blood stem cells and what changes when the cells encounter stress or acquire genetic mutations. Researchers in the van Gastel lab are also developing new methods for metabolic analysis of small numbers of cells, down to the single cell level.
Through new discoveries in blood stem cell metabolism, Nick and his team seek to develop strategies to improve bone marrow transplantation or help in the treatment of blood cancer and other hematological diseases.
Nick van Gastel obtained his Master’s degree in Bioengineering from the University of Ghent (Belgium) in 2007. He then joined the lab of Dr. Geert Carmeliet at KU Leuven (Belgium), where he obtained his PhD in Biomedical Sciences in 2013 working on the development of bone regeneration strategies using skeletal stem cells from periosteum. He stayed in the same lab as a postdoctoral fellow for two years, investigating lipid metabolism in skeletal stem cells. Nick then continued his postdoctoral training in the group of Dr. David Scadden at Harvard University (USA), where he studied the links between metabolism and chemotherapy resistance in leukemia. He joined the de Duve Institute as a Group Leader in 2020, and became an F.R.S-FNRS Research Associate and UCLouvainAssociate Professor in 2021. Since 2022, Nick is also a WELBIO Investigator of the Walloon Excellence (WEL) Research Institute.
Nielsen C, Liu Y, Leguay F, Tirado HA, Dauguet N, van Gastel N.
Exp Hematol (2024) 104588
Tirado HA, Balasundaram N, Laaouimir L, Erdem A, van Gastel N.
Bone Rep (2023) 18:101669
van Gastel N, Spinelli JB, Sharda A, Schajnovitz A, Baryawno N, Rhee C, Oki T, Grace E, Soled HJ, Milosevic J, Sykes DB, Hsu PP, Vander Heiden MG, Vidoudez C, Trauger SA, Haigis MC, Scadden DT.
Cell Metab (2020) 32(3):391-403
van Gastel N, Stegen S, Eelen G, Schoors S, Carlier A, Daniëls VW, Baryawno N, Przybylski D, Depypere M, Stiers PJ, Lambrechts D, Van Looveren R, Torrekens S, Sharda A, Agostinis P, Lambrechts D, Maes F, Swinnen JV, Geris L, Van Oosterwyck H, Thienpont B, Carmeliet P, Scadden DT, Carmeliet G.
Nature (2020) 579(7797):111-117