Ehab Al-Momani
University of Ulm
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ehab Al-Momani.
Journal of Neuroinflammation | 2016
Ina Israel; Andrea Ohsiek; Ehab Al-Momani; Christiane Albert-Weissenberger; Christian Stetter; Stine Mencl; Andreas K. Buck; Christoph Kleinschnitz; Samuel Samnick; Anna-Leena Sirén
BackgroundTraumatic brain injury (TBI) is a major cause of death and disability. Neuroinflammation contributes to acute damage after TBI and modulates long-term evolution of degenerative and regenerative responses to injury. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the relationship of microglia activation to trauma severity, brain energy metabolism, and cellular reactions to injury in a mouse closed head injury model using combined in vivo PET imaging, ex vivo autoradiography, and immunohistochemistry.MethodsA weight-drop closed head injury model was used to produce a mixed diffuse and focal TBI or a purely diffuse mild TBI (mTBI) in C57BL6 mice. Lesion severity was determined by evaluating histological damage and functional outcome using a standardized neuroscore (NSS), gliosis, and axonal injury by immunohistochemistry. Repeated intra-individual in vivo μPET imaging with the specific 18-kDa translocator protein (TSPO) radioligand [18F]DPA-714 was performed on day 1, 7, and 16 and [18F]FDG-μPET imaging for energy metabolism on days 2–5 after trauma using freshly synthesized radiotracers. Immediately after [18F]DPA-714-μPET imaging on days 7 and 16, cellular identity of the [18F]DPA-714 uptake was confirmed by exposing freshly cut cryosections to film autoradiography and successive immunostaining with antibodies against the microglia/macrophage marker IBA-1.ResultsFunctional outcome correlated with focal brain lesions, gliosis, and axonal injury. [18F]DPA-714-μPET showed increased radiotracer uptake in focal brain lesions on days 7 and 16 after TBI and correlated with reduced cerebral [18F]FDG uptake on days 2–5, with functional outcome and number of IBA-1 positive cells on day 7. In autoradiography, [18F]DPA-714 uptake co-localized with areas of IBA1-positive staining and correlated strongly with both NSS and the number of IBA1-positive cells, gliosis, and axonal injury. After mTBI, numbers of IBA-1 positive cells with microglial morphology increased in both brain hemispheres; however, uptake of [18F]DPA-714 was not increased in autoradiography or in μPET imaging.Conclusions[18F]DPA-714 uptake in μPET/autoradiography correlates with trauma severity, brain metabolic deficits, and microglia activation after closed head TBI.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2011
Agnieszka Morgenroth; Elizaveta Urusova; Cornelia Dinger; Ehab Al-Momani; Thomas Kull; Gerhard Glatting; Holm Frauendorf; Olaf Jahn; Felix M. Mottaghy; Sven N. Reske; Boris Zlatopolskiy
The development of prostate carcinoma is associated with alterations in fatty acid metabolism. α-Methylacyl-CoA racemase (AMACR) is a peroxisomal and mitochondrial enzyme that catalyses interconversion between the (S)/(R)-isomers of a range of α-methylacyl-CoA thioesters. AMACR is involved in the β-oxidation of the dietary branched-chain fatty acids and bile acid intermediates. It is highly expressed in prostate (more than 95 %), colon (92 %), and breast cancers (44 %) but not in the respective normal or hyperplastic tissues. Thus, targeting of AMACR could be a new strategy for molecular imaging and therapy of prostate and some other cancers. Unlabeled 2-methylenacyl-CoA thioesters (12 a-c) were designed as AMACR binding ligands. The thioesters were tested for their ability to inhibit the AMACR-mediated epimerization of (25R)-THC-CoA and were found to be strong AMACR inhibitors. Radioiodinated (E)-(131) I-13-iodo-2-methylentridec-12-enoic acid ((131) I-7 c) demonstrated preferential retention in AMACR-positive prostate tumor cells (LNCaP, LNCaP C4-2wt and DU145) compared with both AMACR-knockout LNCaP C4-2 AMACR-siRNA and benign BPH1 prostate cell lines. A significant protein-bound radioactive fraction with main bands at 47 (sum of molecular weights of AMACR plus 12 c), 70, and 75 kDa was detected in LNCaP C4-2 wt cells. In contrast, only negligible amounts of protein-bound radioactivity were found in LNCaP C4-2 AMACR-siRNA cells.
Nuclear Medicine and Biology | 2011
Agnieszka Morgenroth; Cornelia Dinger; Boris D. Zlatopolskiy; Ehab Al-Momani; Gerhard Glatting; Felix M. Mottaghy; Sven N. Reske
Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2014
Benjamin Baur; Elena Andreolli; Ehab Al-Momani; Noeen Malik; H.-J. Machulla; Sven N. Reske; Christoph Solbach
Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2013
Ehab Al-Momani; Noeen Malik; H.-J. Machulla; Sven N. Reske; Christoph Solbach
Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2010
Ehab Al-Momani; Boris Zlatopolskiy; Christoph Solbach; Sven N. Reske; H.-J. Machulla
Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2011
Ehab Al-Momani; Boris Zlatopolskiy; Christoph Solbach; Sven N. Reske; H.-J. Machulla
Clinical Nuclear Medicine | 2018
Samuel Samnick; Ehab Al-Momani; Jan-Stefan Schmid; Anja Mottok; Andreas K. Buck; Constantin Lapa
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2014
Ehab Al-Momani; Gerhard Jörg; Denis Lamparter; Andreas K. Buck; Samuel Samnick
Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry | 2012
Ehab Al-Momani; Boris Zlatopolskiy; Christoph Solbach; H.-J. Machulla; Sven N. Reske