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Featured researches published by Ahmed Y. Shanab.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Diabetes and Overexpression of proNGF Cause Retinal Neurodegeneration via Activation of RhoA Pathway

Mohammed M.H. Al-Gayyar; Barbara A. Mysona; Suraporn Matragoon; Mohammed A. Abdelsaid; Mona F. El-Azab; Ahmed Y. Shanab; Yonju Ha; Sylvia B. Smith; Kathryn E. Bollinger; Azza B. El-Remessy

Our previous studies showed positive correlation between accumulation of proNGF, activation of RhoA and neuronal death in diabetic models. Here, we examined the neuroprotective effects of selective inhibition of RhoA kinase in the diabetic rat retina and in a model that stably overexpressed the cleavage-resistance proNGF plasmid in the retina. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were rendered diabetic using streptozotosin or stably express cleavage-resistant proNGF plasmid. The neuroprotective effects of the intravitreal injection of RhoA kinase inhibitor Y27632 were examined in vivo. Effects of proNGF were examined in freshly isolated primary retinal ganglion cell (RGC) cultures and RGC-5 cell line. Retinal neurodegeneration was assessed by counting TUNEL-positive and Brn-3a positive retinal ganglion cells. Expression of proNGF, p75NTR, cleaved-PARP, caspase-3 and p38MAPK/JNK were examined by Western-blot. Activation of RhoA was assessed by pull-down assay and G-LISA. Diabetes and overexpression of proNGF resulted in retinal neurodegeneration as indicated by 9- and 6-fold increase in TUNEL-positive cells, respectively. In vitro, proNGF induced 5-fold cell death in RGC-5 cell line, and it induced >10-fold cell death in primary RGC cultures. These effects were associated with significant upregulation of p75NTR and activation of RhoA. While proNGF induced TNF-α expression in vivo, it selectively activated RhoA in primary RGC cultures and RGC-5 cell line. Inhibiting RhoA kinase with Y27632 significantly reduced diabetes- and proNGF-induced activation of proapoptotic p38MAPK/JNK, expression of cleaved-PARP and caspase-3 and prevented retinal neurodegeneration in vivo and in vitro. Taken together, these results provide compelling evidence for a causal role of proNGF in diabetes-induced retinal neurodegeneration through enhancing p75NTR expression and direct activation of RhoA and p38MAPK/JNK apoptotic pathways.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2014

Deletion of thioredoxin‐interacting protein preserves retinal neuronal function by preventing inflammation and vascular injury

M F El-Azab; B R B Baldowski; Barbara A. Mysona; Ahmed Y. Shanab; I N Mohamed; Mohammed A. Abdelsaid; Suraporn Matragoon; Kathryn E. Bollinger; A Saul; Azza B. El-Remessy

Retinal neurodegeneration is an early and critical event in several diseases associated with blindness. Clinically, therapies that target neurodegeneration fail. We aimed to elucidate the multiple roles by which thioredoxin‐interacting protein (TXNIP) contributes to initial and sustained retinal neurodegeneration.


Molecular therapy. Methods & clinical development | 2015

Silencing p75NTR prevents proNGF-induced endothelial cell death and development of acellular capillaries in rat retina

Ahmed Y. Shanab; Barbara A. Mysona; Suraporn Matragoon; Azza B. El-Remessy

Accumulation of the nerve growth factor precursor (proNGF) and its receptor p75NTR have been associated with several neurodegenerative diseases in both brain and retina. However, whether proNGF contributes to microvascular degeneration remain unexplored. This study seeks to investigate the mechanism by which proNGF/p75NTR induce endothelial cell (EC) death and development of acellular capillaries, a surrogate marker of retinal ischemia. Stable overexpression of the cleavage-resistant proNGF and molecular silencing of p75NTR were utilized in human retinal EC and rat retinas in vivo. Stable overexpression of proNGF decreased NGF levels and induced retinal vascular cell death evident by 1.9-fold increase in acellular capillaries and activation of JNK and cleaved-PARP that were mitigated by p75NTRshRNA. In vitro, overexpression of proNGF did not alter TNF-α level, reduced NGF, however induced EC apoptosis evident by activation of JNK and p38 MAPK, cleaved-PARP. Silencing p75NTR using siRNA restored expression of NGF and TrkA activation and prevented EC apoptosis. Treatment of EC with human-mutant proNGF induced apoptosis that coincided with marked protein interaction and nuclear translocation of p75NTR and the neurotrophin receptor interacting factor. These effects were abolished by a selective p75NTR antagonist. Therefore, targeting p75NTR represents a potential therapeutic strategy for diseases associated with aberrant expression of proNGF.


Antioxidants | 2017

Deletion of TXNIP Mitigates High-Fat Diet-Impaired Angiogenesis and Prevents Inflammation in a Mouse Model of Critical Limb Ischemia

Sally L Elshaer; Islam N. Mohamed; Maha Coucha; Sara Altantawi; Wael Eldahshan; Megan L. Bartasi; Ahmed Y. Shanab; Renee Lorys; Azza B. El-Remessy

Background: Previous work demonstrated that high-fat diet (HFD) triggered thioredoxin-interacting protein (TXNIP) and that silencing TXNIP prevents diabetes-impaired vascular recovery. Here, we examine the impact of genetic deletion of TXNIP on HFD-impaired vascular recovery using hind limb ischemia model. Methods: Wild type mice (WT, C57Bl/6) and TXNIP knockout mice (TKO) were fed either normal chow diet (WT-ND and TKO-ND) or 60% high-fat diet (WT-HFD and TKO-HFD). After four weeks of HFD, unilateral hind limb ischemia was performed and blood flow was measured using Laser doppler scanner at baseline and then weekly for an additional three weeks. Vascular density, nitrative stress, infiltration of CD68+ macrophages, and expression of inflammasome, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), VEGF receptor-2 were examined by slot blot, Western blot and immunohistochemistry. Results: By week 8, HFD caused similar increases in weight, cholesterol and triglycerides in both WT and TKO. At week 4 and week 8, HFD significantly impaired glucose tolerance in WT and to a lesser extent in TKO. HFD significantly impaired blood flow and vascular density (CD31 labeled) in skeletal muscle of WT mice compared to ND but not in TKO. HFD and ischemia significantly induced tyrosine nitration, and systemic IL-1β and infiltration of CD68+ cells in skeletal muscle from WT but not from TKO. HFD significantly increased cleaved-caspase-1 and IL-1 β compared to ND. Under both ND, ischemia tended to increase VEGF expression and increased VEGFR2 activation in WT only but not TKO. Conclusion: Similar to prior observation in diabetes, HFD-induced obesity can compromise vascular recovery in response to ischemic insult. The mechanism involves increased TXNIP-NLRP3 (nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-like receptor protein 3) inflammasome activation, nitrative stress and impaired VEGFR2 activation. Deletion of TXNIP restored blood flow, reduced nitrative stress and blunted inflammasome-mediated inflammation; however, it did not impact VEGF/VEGFR2 in HFD. Targeting TXNIP-NLRP3 inflammasome can provide potential therapeutic target in obesity-induced vascular complication.


Angiogenesis | 2015

Candesartan stimulates reparative angiogenesis in ischemic retinopathy model: role of hemeoxygenase-1 (HO-1).

Ahmed Y. Shanab; Sally L Elshaer; Mona F. El-Azab; Sahar Soliman; Harika Sabbineni; Suraporn Matragoon; Susan C. Fagan; Azza B. El-Remessy


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

ProNGF causes retinal endothelial cell permeability via activation of p75NTR/RhoA pathway

Barbara A. Mysona; Dorothy Rodenbeck; Ahmed Y. Shanab; Suraporn Matragoon; Azza B. El-Remessy


Journal of Diabetes, Metabolic Disorders & Control | 2017

Deletion of the neurotrophin receptor p75NTR prevents diabetes-induced retinal acellular capillaries in streptozotocin-induced mouse diabetic model

Riyaz Mohamed; Ahmed Y. Shanab; Azza B El Remessy


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016

Modulating Expression of Thioredoxin Interacting Protein Prevents Secondary Damage and Preserves Visual Function In A Model of Ischemia/Reperfusion

Azza B. El-Remessy; Maha Coucha; Ahmed Y. Shanab; Almira Vazdarjanova


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016

Modulation Of ProNGF/p75NTR Pathway Prevents Microvascular Degeneration In Diabetic Retinopathy

Riyaz Mohamed; Ahmed Y. Shanab; Sally L Elshaer; H. Uri Saragovi; Azza B. El-Remessy


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Modulating p75NTR Prevents ProNGF- And Diabetes-Induced Acellular Capillaries Via Suppression of NRIF Nuclear Translocation

Ahmed Y. Shanab; Barbara A. Mysona; Suraporn Matragoon; Megan Clendenning; Azza B. El-Remessy

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Barbara A. Mysona

Georgia Regents University

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Maha Coucha

Georgia Regents University

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A Saul

Georgia Regents University

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B R B Baldowski

Georgia Regents University

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