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Dive into the research topics where Ahmad Akel is active.

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Featured researches published by Ahmad Akel.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2007

Suicidal erythrocyte death in sepsis

Daniela S. Kempe; Ahmad Akel; Philipp A. Lang; Tobias Hermle; Raja Biswas; Juliana Muresanu; Björn Friedrich; Peter Dreischer; Christiane Wolz; Ulrike Schumacher; Andreas Peschel; Friedrich Götz; Gerd Döring; Thomas Wieder; Erich Gulbins; Florian Lang

Sequelae of sepsis include anemia which presumably results from accelerated clearance of erythrocytes from circulating blood. The underlying mechanisms, however, remained hitherto elusive. Most recent studies disclosed that increased cytosolic Ca2+ activity and ceramide both trigger suicidal erythrocyte death (i.e., eryptosis), which is characterized by lipid scrambling of the cell membrane leading to phosphatidylserine exposure at the erythrocyte surface. Phosphatidylserine exposing erythrocytes may adhere to vascular walls or may be engulfed by macrophages equipped with phosphatidylserine receptors. To explore whether sepsis leads to eryptosis, erythrocytes from healthy volunteers were exposed to plasma of patients suffering from sepsis, or to supernatants from sepsis producing pathogens. Then, phosphatidylserine exposure (annexin V binding), cell volume (forward scatter), cytosolic Ca2+ activity (Fluo3 fluorescence), and ceramide formation (anti-ceramide antibody) were determined by flow cytometry. Challenge of erythrocytes with plasma from the patients but not with plasma from healthy individuals triggered annexin V binding. The effect of patient plasma on erythrocyte annexin V binding was paralleled by formation of ceramide and a significant increase of cytosolic Ca2+ activity. Exposure of erythrocytes to supernatant of pathogens similarly induced eryptosis, an effect correlating with sphingomyelinase activity. The present observations disclose a novel pathophysiological mechanism leading to anemia and derangement of microcirculation during sepsis. Exposure to plasma from septic patients triggers phosphatidylserine exposure leading to adherence to the vascular wall and clearance from circulating blood.


The FASEB Journal | 2005

Enhanced programmed cell death of iron-deficient erythrocytes

Daniela S. Kempe; Philipp A. Lang; Christophe Duranton; Ahmad Akel; Karl S. Lang; Stephan M. Huber; Thomas Wieder; Florian Lang

Exposure of erythrocytes to osmotic shock, oxidative stress, and energy depletion activates Cl–sensitive and Ca2+‐permeable cation channels. Subsequent Ca2+ entry triggers eryptosis, characterized by erythrocyte shrinkage, membrane blebbing, and phosphatidylserine exposure all features typical for apoptotic death of nucleated cells. Erythrocytes exposing phosphatidylserine are recognized, bound, engulfed, and degraded by macrophages. Eryptosis thus fosters clearance of affected erythrocytes from circulating blood. Iron deficiency leads to anemia, in part by decreasing erythrocyte life span. In this study, phosphatidylserine exposure, cell size, and cytosolic Ca2+ were measured by FACS analysis of annexin‐V binding, forward scatter, and Fluo‐3 fluorescence, respectively. Erythrocytes from mice on control diet were compared with erythrocytes from mice exposed 10 weeks to iron‐deficient diet. Iron deficiency significantly (P<0.001) enhanced erythrocyte annexin‐V binding (from 2.4 to 3.7%), decreased forward scatter (from 544 to 393), and increased cytosolic Ca2+ concentration. 45Ca2+ flux measurements and patch clamp experiments revealed enhanced Ca2+ uptake (by 2.3‐fold) and cation channel activity. The half‐life of fluorescence‐labeled, iron‐deficient, or Ca2+‐loaded erythrocytes was significantly reduced compared with control erythrocytes. Thus, the experiments reveal a novel mechanism triggered by iron deficiency, which presumably contributes to accelerated clearance of erythrocytes in iron deficiency anemia.


Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry | 2009

Accelerated Clearance of Plasmodium-infected Erythrocytes in Sickle Cell Trait and Annexin-A7 Deficiency

Philipp A. Lang; Ravi S. Kasinathan; Verena B. Brand; Christophe Duranton; Camelia Lang; Saisudha Koka; Ekaterina Shumilina; Daniela S. Kempe; Valerie Tanneur; Ahmad Akel; Karl S. Lang; Michael Föller; Jürgen F. J. Kun; Peter G. Kremsner; Sebastian Wesselborg; Stefan Laufer; Christoph S. Clemen; Claudia Herr; Angelika A. Noegel; Thomas Wieder; Erich Gulbins; Florian Lang; Stephan M. Huber

The course of malaria does not only depend on the virulence of the parasite Plasmodium but also on properties of host erythrocytes. Here, we show that infection of erythrocytes from human sickle cell trait (HbA/S) carriers with ring stages of P. falciparum led to significantly enhanced PGE2 formation, Ca2+ permeability, annexin-A7 degradation, phosphatidylserine (PS) exposure at the cell surface, and clearance by macrophages. P. berghei-infected erythrocytes from annexin-A7-deficient (annexin-A7-/-) mice were more rapidly cleared than infected wildtype cells. Accordingly, P. berghei-infected annexin-A7-/- mice developed less parasitemia than wildtype mice. The cyclooxygenase inhibitor aspirin decreased erythrocyte PS exposure in infected annexin-A7-/- mice and abolished the differences of parasitemia and survival between the genotypes. Conversely, the PGE2-agonist sulprostone decreased parasitemia and increased survival of wild type mice. In conclusion, PS exposure on erythrocytes results in accelerated clearance of Plasmodium ring stage-infected HbA/S or annexin-A7-/- erythrocytes and thus confers partial protection against malaria in vivo.


Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry | 2006

Stimulation of Erythrocyte Phosphatidylserine Exposure by Paclitaxel

Philipp A. Lang; Jens Huober; Cornelia Bachmann; Daniela S. Kempe; Malgorzata Sobiesiak; Ahmad Akel; Olivier M. Niemoeller; Peter Dreischer; Kerstin Eisele; Barbara A. Klarl; Erich Gulbins; Florian Lang; Thomas Wieder

Side effects of cytostatic treatment include development of anemia resulting from either decreased generation or accelerated clearance of circulating erythrocytes. Recent experiments revealed a novel kind of stress-induced erythrocyte death, i.e. eryptosis, which is characterized by enhanced cytosolic Ca2+ levels, increased ceramide formation and exposure of phosphatidylserine at the cell surface. The present study explored whether cytostatic treatment with paclitaxel (Taxol®) triggers eryptosis. Blood was drawn from cancer patients before and after infusion of 175 mg/m2 Taxol®. The treatment significantly decreased the hematocrit and significantly increased the percentage of annexin-Vbinding erythrocytes in vivo (by 37%). In vitro incubation of human erythrocytes with 10 μM paclitaxel again significantly increased annexin-V-binding (by 129%) and augmented the increase of annexin-Vbinding following cellular stress. The enhanced phosphatidylserine exposure was not dependent on caspase-activity but paralleled by erythrocyte shrinkage, increase of cytosolic Ca2+ activity, ceramide formation and activation of calpain. Phosphatidylserine exposure was similarly induced by docetaxel but not by carboplatin or doxorubicin. Moreover, eryptosis was triggered by the Ca2+ ionophore ionomycin (10 μM). In mice, ionomycintreated eryptotic erythrocytes were rapidly cleared from circulating blood and sequestrated into the spleen. In conclusion, our data strongly suggest that paclitaxel-induced anemia is at least partially due to induction of eryptosis.


Naunyn-schmiedebergs Archives of Pharmacology | 2006

Induction of eryptosis by cyclosporine

Olivier M. Niemoeller; Ahmad Akel; Philipp A. Lang; Philipp Attanasio; Daniela S. Kempe; Tobias Hermle; Malgorzata Sobiesiak; Thomas Wieder; Florian Lang

Side effects of cyclosporine treatment include anemia. Most recent studies have found that anemia may be caused by triggering of suicidal erythrocyte death (eryptosis), i.e. activation of an erythrocyte scramblase and phosphatidylserine exposure at the erythrocyte surface. Phosphatidylserine exposing cells are rapidly cleared from circulating blood by phagocytosis. Stimulators of erythrocyte membrane scrambling include cytosolic Ca2+ and ceramide, which are increased by entry through Ca2+-permeable cation channels and by activation of a sphingomyelinase, respectively. The present study has been performed to test for an effect of cyclosporine on eryptosis. Erythrocytes from healthy volunteers were exposed to cyclosporine, and phosphatidylserine exposure (annexin V binding), cell volume (forward scatter), cytosolic Ca2+ activity (Fluo3-dependent fluorescence), ceramide formation (anti-ceramide-FITC antibody), and 45Ca2+ uptake were determined by flow cytometry and tracer flux measurements, respectively. Exposure of erythrocytes to cyclosporine triggered annexin V binding and significantly enhanced the increased annexin V binding both following glucose depletion and after hyperosmotic or isotonic cell shrinkage. However, cyclosporine significantly decreased cytosolic Ca2+ activity and did not stimulate 45Ca2+ uptake. Instead, cyclosporine transiently stimulated ceramide formation, decreased the cytosolic ATP concentration and potentiated the decline of cytosolic ATP concentration following glucose depletion. Elevated ceramide levels and ATP depletion, in turn, sensitize the erythrocytes for the eryptotic effects of Ca2+. The present observations may provide a mechanistic explanation for the anemia following treatment with this important immunosuppressive drug.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2006

Suicidal death of erythrocytes in recurrent hemolytic uremic syndrome

Philipp A. Lang; Ortraud Beringer; Jan P. Nicolay; Oliver Amon; Daniela S. Kempe; Tobias Hermle; Philipp Attanasio; Ahmad Akel; Richard Schäfer; Björn Friedrich; Teut Risler; Matthias Baur; Christoph J. Olbricht; Lothar Bernd Zimmerhackl; Peter F. Zipfel; Thomas Wieder; Florian Lang


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2006

Protein kinase C mediates erythrocyte "programmed cell death" following glucose depletion.

Barbara A. Klarl; Philipp A. Lang; Daniela S. Kempe; Olivier M. Niemoeller; Ahmad Akel; Malgorzata Sobiesiak; Kerstin Eisele; Marlis Podolski; Stephan M. Huber; Thomas Wieder; Florian Lang


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2006

Stimulation of erythrocyte phosphatidylserine exposure by chlorpromazine

Ahmad Akel; Tobias Hermle; Olivier M. Niemoeller; Daniela S. Kempe; Philipp A. Lang; Philipp Attanasio; Marlis Podolski; Thomas Wieder; Florian Lang


Diabetes | 2006

SGK1 Kinase Upregulates GLUT1 Activity and Plasma Membrane Expression

Monica Palmada; Christoph Boehmer; Ahmad Akel; Jeyaganesh Rajamanickam; Sankarganesh Jeyaraj; Konrad Keller; Florian Lang


Naunyn-schmiedebergs Archives of Pharmacology | 2005

Inhibition of erythrocyte “apoptosis” by catecholamines

Philipp A. Lang; Daniela S. Kempe; Ahmad Akel; Barbara A. Klarl; Kerstin Eisele; Marlies Podolski; Tobias Hermle; Olivier M. Niemoeller; Philipp Attanasio; Stephan M. Huber; Thomas Wieder; Florian Lang; Christophe Duranton

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Florian Lang

University of Tübingen

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Philipp A. Lang

University of Düsseldorf

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