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Dive into the research topics where Imad Lahdou is active.

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Featured researches published by Imad Lahdou.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Mitomycin C-treated dendritic cells inactivate autoreactive T cells: Toward the development of a tolerogenic vaccine in autoimmune diseases

Peter Terness; Thilo Oelert; Sandra Ehser; Jing Jing Chuang; Imad Lahdou; Christian Kleist; Florian W. Velten; Günter J. Hämmerling; Bernd Arnold; Gerhard Opelz

Treatment of autoimmune diseases remains a challenge for immunological research. An ideal therapy should inhibit the immune reaction against the diseased organ and leave the rest of the immune response intact. Our previous studies showed that donor-derived dendritic cells (DCs) treated in vitro with mitomycin C (MMC) suppress rat heart allograft rejection if injected into recipients before transplantation. Here we analyze their efficacy in controlling autoimmunity. MMC-DCs loaded with myelin-basic-protein (MBP) inhibited specific T cells derived from multiple sclerosis patients in vitro. If coincubated with MMC-DCs, T cells were arrested in the G0/G1 cell cycle phase. Microarray gene scan showed that MMC influences the expression of 116 genes in DCs, one main cluster comprising apoptotic and the second cluster immunosuppressive genes. Apparently, the combination of apoptosis with expression of tolerogenic molecules renders MMC-DCs suppressive. MBP-loaded MMC-DCs also inhibited mouse T cells in vitro and, in contrast to MBP-loaded naïve DCs, did not induce experimental autoimmune encephalitis. Most importantly, mice vaccinated with inhibitory DCs became resistant to the disease. Whereas this is not the first report on generation of suppressive DCs, it delineates a method using a clinically approved drug at nontoxic concentrations, which yields irreversibly changed DCs, effective across species in vitro and in vivo.


Transplantation | 2009

Urinary proinflammatory cytokine response in renal transplant recipients with polyomavirus BK viruria.

Mahmoud Sadeghi; Volker Daniel; Paul Schnitzler; Imad Lahdou; Cord Naujokat; Martin Zeier; Gerhard Opelz

Background. Polyomavirus BK (BKV) has emerged as an important complication after kidney transplantation. BKV-associated nephropathy develops in approximately 5% to 8% of renal transplant recipients, and its prognosis is poor. The relationship between urine cytokines and BK viruria in kidney recipients has not been defined. Patients and Methods. We compared posttransplant urine cytokine levels of 65 renal transplant outpatients with (BK-positive) or without BK viruria (BK-negative, n=33), low- (n=16) or high-level (n=16) BK viral load (VL), and 24 healthy controls (HCs). Soluble interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (sIL-1RA), interleukin (IL)-2, sIL-2R, IL-3, IL-4, IL-6, sIL-6R, IL-10, IL-17, transforming growth factor-&bgr;2, interferon-&ggr;, and tumor necrosis factor-&agr; levels were determined using commercially available ELISA kits. Results. BK-positive patients showed higher urine IL-3 (P=0.006), sIL-6R (P=0.010), IL-6 (P=0.020), and sIL-1RA (P=0.050) than BK-negative patients. Compared with HCs, BK-negative patients had lower urine sIL-1RA (P=0.003), sIL-6R (P=0.001), and IL-17 (P<0.001), whereas BK-positive patients had higher urine IL-3 (P=0.004) and IL-6 (P=0.001) and lower IL-17 (P<0.001), suggesting cytokine suppression by immunosuppression and upregulation by BK-infection. Urine sIL-6R (P=0.003) and IL-6 (P=0.010) were higher in patients with high VL than in patients with low VL. Additionally, patients with high VL showed higher urine IL-6 (P=0.001), sIL-6R (P=0.001), sIL-1RA (P=0.016), and IL-3 (P=0.047) than BK-negative patients, and higher urine IL-6 (P<0.001) and lower IL-17 (P<0.001) than HCs. Conclusion. BK-positive renal transplant recipients, especially those with high VL, showed strong inflammatory cytokine responses with increases of urine sIL-1RA, IL-3, IL-6, and sIL-6R. Our data suggest that monocyte- and Th-2-induced cytokines are involved in the pathogenesis of BKV-associated nephropathy.


Transplantation | 2012

Plasmapheresis adjusts inflammatory responses in potential kidney transplant recipients.

Mahmoud Sadeghi; Daniel; H. Wang; Martin Zeier; Peter Schemmer; Arianeb Mehrabi; Imad Lahdou; Christian Morath; Gerhard Opelz

Background Plasmapheresis (PP) has been used in the treatment of various immunologic disorders, and its efficacy has mainly been attributed to the removal of humoral factors and autoantibodies. Besides these effects, PP may induce modifications of the cellular immunologic status, contributing to the restoration of impaired immunologic function. The effect of PP on lymphocyte subpopulations, plasma neopterin, and cytokines in renal transplant recipients was investigated in this study. Methods We compared pre-PP and post-PP lymphocyte subpopulations and plasma neopterin in 37, and cytokine plasma levels in 30, potential renal transplant recipients. Plasma neopterin and cytokines were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kits, lymphocyte subsets were determined using four-color fluorescence flow cytometry. Results Lymphocyte subpopulation counts and ratios including CD45+:&mgr;L (P=0.005), CD3+:&mgr;L (P=0.02), CD4+DR+:&mgr;L (P=0.002), CD8+:&mgr;L (P=0.01), and CD8+DR+:&mgr;L (P=0.005) T cells; CD4+DR+:CD4+ (P=0.009) and CD8+DR+:CD8+ (P=0.0004) ratios; DR+ cells:&mgr;L (P=0.003); CD19+ B lymphocytes:&mgr;L (P=0.001); and plasma levels of neopterin (P<;0.0001), soluble interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (P<;0.0001), IL-8 (P=0.0001), and tumor necrosis factor-&agr; (P=0.008) were significantly decreased after PP as compared with before PP. The results indicate a decrease of activated DR+, CD4+, and CD8+ T lymphocytes and B lymphocytes, and a decrease of monocyte and macrophage activation as a result of PP. Conclusion Based on these results, we conclude that PP not only removes antibodies from the plasma but, in addition, modulates T-lymphocyte activation and the inflammatory response by decreasing plasma proinflammatory cytokines.


Human Immunology | 2012

Strong association of phenylalanine and tryptophan metabolites with activated cytomegalovirus infection in kidney transplant recipients.

Mahmoud Sadeghi; Imad Lahdou; Volker Daniel; Paul Schnitzler; Gerhard Fusch; Joerg C. Schefold; Martin Zeier; Mircea Iancu; Gerhard Opelz; Peter Terness

Infection-induced inflammation triggers catabolism of proteins and amino acids. Phenylalanine and tryptophan are 2 amino acids related to infections that regulate immune responses. Polyomavirus BK (BKV) and cytomegalovirus (CMV) are important pathogens after kidney transplantation. We investigated the clinical relevance of phenylalanine, tryptophan, and tryptophan metabolites (kynurenine and quinolinic acid) plasma levels in kidney transplant recipients with active CMV (BKV(-)CMV(+), n = 12) or BK virus infection (BKV(+)CMV(-), n = 37). Recipients without active viral infections (CMV(-)BKV(-), n = 28) and CMV(-)BKV(-) healthy individuals (HCs, n = 50) served as controls. In contrast to BKV infection, activated CMV infection is tightly linked to increased phenylalanine and tryptophan metabolite plasma levels (p ≤ 0.002). The association of phenylalanine (cutoff 50 μmol/L) with CMV infection demonstrates high sensitivity (100%) and specificity (94%). By contrast, kynurenine (p = 0.029) and quinolinic acid (p = 0.003) values reflect the severity of CMV infection. In this early proof-of-concept trial, evidence indicates that activated CMV infection is strongly associated with increased phenylalanine as well as kynurenine and quinolinic acid plasma levels. Moreover, tryptophan metabolite levels correlate with disease severity. Measurement of these amino acids is an inexpensive and fast method expected to complete conventional diagnostic assays.


Human Immunology | 2010

Increased pretransplantation plasma kynurenine levels do not protect from but predict acute kidney allograft rejection.

Imad Lahdou; Mahmoud Sadeghi; Volker Daniel; Martin Schenk; Fabrice Renner; Rolf Weimer; Stefan Löb; Jan Schmidt; Arianeb Mehrabi; Paul Schnitzler; Alfred Königsrainer; Bernd Döhler; Gerhard Opelz; Peter Terness

Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO), an enzyme expressed in many cell types, catalyses degradation of tryptophan (Trp) to kynurenine (Kyn) and may exert immunosuppressive functions, mediated mainly by kynurenines. Therefore, increased Kyn concentrations would be expected to protect allografts from rejection. We conducted this study to examine whether Kyn has predictive value for kidney graft outcome. End-stage renal disease patients (n = 210) demonstrated an increased Kyn/Trp ratio compared with healthy controls (n = 30). Both Kyn and Trp levels were significantly higher in patients who subsequently developed acute rejection than in patients who did not (p < 0.001 and p < 0.001, respectively). Furthermore, pretransplantation Kyn and Trp plasma concentrations were significantly different in patients who went on to develop acute rejection (high values) or acute tubular necrosis (low values) (p = 0.007 and p = 0.021, respectively). After transplantation Kyn levels decreased. Approximately 3 days before biopsy-confirmed rejection, Kyn was significantly increased in patients with rejection compared with those without rejection (p < 0.001). Contrary to expectation, high Kyn plasma levels before transplantation were not predictive of low rejection risk. Although informative in overall terms, at the present stage, Kyn levels do not allow the concise risk differentiation of individual patients.


Human Immunology | 2013

Increased serum levels of quinolinic acid indicate enhanced severity of hepatic dysfunction in patients with liver cirrhosis

Imad Lahdou; Mahmoud Sadeghi; Hani Oweira; Gerhard Fusch; Volker Daniel; Arianeb Mehrabi; Ge. Jung; Hazem Elhadedy; Jan Schmidt; Flavius Sandra-Petrescu; Mircea Iancu; Gerhard Opelz; Peter Terness; Joerg C. Schefold

BACKGROUND The Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD) score is a tool for assessment of the degree of hepatic insufficiency/failure. Quinolinic acid (QuinA) is a tryptophan metabolite produced by activated macrophages. Here we investigate whether the degree of systemic inflammation (QuinA, neopterin, CRP and IL-6) correlates with clinical liver dysfunction according to the MELD Score. METHOD Ninety-four patients with liver cirrhosis were categorized into 2 groups according to baseline MELD score (group I, MELD <20, n = 61, and group II, MELD ≥20, n = 33). RESULTS Serum levels of QuinA, neopterin, CRP, and IL-6 significantly correlated with MELD score (r = 0.77, 0.75, 0.57, and 0.50; p < 0.0001, respectively). Patients of group II had significantly higher serum levels of QuinA, neopterin, CRP, and IL-6 than group I (p0.0001). ROC curve analysis showed that QuinA and neopterin are more sensitive markers for severity of liver disease than established markers of inflammation such as CRP and IL-6 (sensitivity = 86% and 79%, respectively) (AUC=0.89 and 0.89, respectively). QuinA provided the most sensitive index with regard to the identification of patients with hepatic encephalopathy. CONCLUSION Serum levels of QuinA reflect the degree of liver dysfunction. Moreover, high levels of QuinA may serve as a sensitive indicator of hepatic encephalopathy.


British Journal of Cancer | 2015

Serum levels of chemokines CCL4 and CCL5 in cirrhotic patients indicate the presence of hepatocellular carcinoma

Mahmoud Sadeghi; Imad Lahdou; Hani Oweira; Volker Daniel; Peter Terness; Jan Schmidt; K-H Weiss; T Longerich; Peter Schemmer; Gerhard Opelz; Arianeb Mehrabi

Background:Most hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) are diagnosed at an advanced stage. The prognostic value of serum tumour markers alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) and des-gamma-carboxy prothrombin (DCP) is limited. The aim of our study is to evaluate the diagnostic value of serum growth factors, apoptotic and inflammatory mediators of cirrhotic patients with and without HCC.Methods:Serum samples were collected from cirrhotic potential liver transplant patients (LTx) with (n=61) and without HCC (n=78) as well as from healthy controls (HCs; n=39). Serum concentrations of CRP, neopterin and IL-6 as markers of inflammation and thrombopoietin (TPO), GCSF, FGF basic and VEGF, HMGB1, CK-18 (M65) and CK18 fragment (M30) and a panel of proinflammatory chemokines (CCL2, CCL3, CCL4, CCL5, CXCL5 and IL-8) were measured. Chi square, Fisher exact, Mann–Whitney U-tests, ROC curve analysis and forward stepwise logistic regression analyses were applied.Results:Patients with HCC had higher serum TPO and chemokines (P<0.001 for TPO, CCL4, CCL5 and CXCL5) and lower CCL2 (P=0.008) levels than cirrhotic patients without HCC. Multivariate forward stepwise regression analysis for significant parameters showed that among the studied parameters CCL4 and CCL5 (P=0.001) are diagnostic markers of HCC. Serum levels of TPO and chemokines were lower, whereas M30 was significantly higher in cirrhotic patients than in HCs.Conclusions:High serum levels of inflammatory chemokines such as CCL4 and CCL5 in the serum of cirrhotic patients indicate the presence of HCC.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Role of human corneal endothelial cells in T-cell-mediated alloimmune attack in vitro.

Imad Lahdou; Christoph Engler; Stefan Mehrle; Volker Daniel; Mahmoud Sadeghi; Gerhard Opelz; Peter Terness

PURPOSE Human corneal endothelial cells (HCEC) are a potential target of immune attack after corneal transplantation. The aim of this in vitro study was to investigate the role of HCEC during the alloimmune response of T-cells by examining cytokine profiles, function of the immunosuppressive enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxigenase (IDO), major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I/-II), T-cell proliferation, and the induction of cell death. METHODS Real-time PCR and RP-HPLC were used to determine IDO expression and activity. Multiplex assay was performed for quantification of cytokine levels. T-cell proliferation was assessed by thymidine incorporation, and HCEC cell death was measured by flow cytometry. RESULTS Human corneal endothelial cells induce strong proliferation of allogeneic T-cells and an increase of proinflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-1α (IL-1α), IL-1β, IL-6, interferon-gamma (IFN-γ), and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α). Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (and to a lesser extent IFN-γ) induces apoptosis. Moreover, IFN-γ strongly upregulates MHC-II molecules and IDO activity in HCEC as reflected by high kynurenine (Kyn) concentrations. Interestingly, the T-cell response was not affected by increased IDO activity, since blocking of IDO did not affect the proliferation rate. Indoleamine 2,3-dioxigenase-induced Kyn levels did not exceed concentrations of 175 ± 20 μM. Concentrations of ≥400 μM Kyn were required to suppress T-cell proliferation. CONCLUSIONS Our data show that T-cell attack on HCEC leads to increased concentrations of proinflammatory cytokines. Inflammatory cytokines induce apoptosis and upregulate MHC-II molecules and IDO in HCEC. Although increased IDO activity does not influence the T-cell response, it constitutes an inflammatory marker of the alloimmune response toward HCEC.


Human Immunology | 2016

Early post-transplant neopterin associated with one year survival and bacteremia in liver transplant recipients

Hani Oweira; Imad Lahdou; Volker Daniel; Stefan Hofer; Markus Mieth; Jan Schmidt; Peter Schemmer; Gerhard Opelz; Arianeb Mehrabi; Mahmoud Sadeghi

Bacterial infections are the most common complications, and the major cause of mortality after liver transplantation (Tx). Neopterin, a marker of immune activation, is produced in monocyte/macrophages in response to inflammation. The aim of our study was to investigate whether early post-operation serum levels of neopterin were associated with post-transplant bacteremia and mortality in liver transplant recipients. We studied 162 of 262 liver Tx patients between January 2008 and February 2011 of whom pre- and early post-Tx sera samples were available. Pre- and early post-operative risk factors of infection and mortality were evaluated in 45 bacteremic patients and 117 non-bacteremic patients. During one-year follow-up, 28 of 262 patients died because of graft failure, septicemia and other diseases. Post-Tx serum neopterin on day 10 (p<0.001) were significantly higher in bacteriemic patients than in patients without bacteremia. Logistic regression analyses showed that day 10 post-Tx neopterin serum level ⩾40 nmol/l has a predictive value (OR=6.86: p<0.001) for bacteremia and mortality (OR=3.47: p=0.021). Our results suggest that early post-Tx neopterin serum levels are very sensitive predictive markers of one-year post-Tx bacteremia and mortality in liver Tx recipients.


Human Immunology | 2016

Early post-operative acute phase response in patients with early graft dysfunction is predictive of 6-month and 12-month mortality in liver transplant recipients.

Hani Oweira; Imad Lahdou; Volker Daniel; Gerhard Opelz; Jan Schmidt; Ahmed Zidan; Arianeb Mehrabi; Mahmoud Sadeghi

UNLABELLED Early allograft dysfunction (EAD) after liver transplantation is mostly a reversible event caused by factors related to ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. EAD represents a hepatic injury associated with pre- and early post-transplant inflammatory cytokine responses. Aim of the present study was to evaluate the prognostic and diagnostic value of CRP in liver transplant recipients with EAD. MATERIALS AND METHODS Forty-seven patients with EAD were compared with 115 non-EAD patients. Pre- and post-transplant parameters were analyzed. EAD was defined based on postoperative liver function tests such as INR, bilirubin and liver enzymes. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS version 18.0. RESULTS Pre-transplant liver enzyme were not significantly different in the two groups. At day 3, 5 and 10 post-transplant CRP was significantly higher in patients with EAD than in non-EAD patients (p⩽0.001 for all investigations) and remained consistently high in patients with EAD and low in non-EAD patients. EAD patients with high CRP at post-transplant days 3 and 5 showed lower survival at 6-month and 12-month post-transplant than patients with low CRP. CONCLUSION Our results indicate a prognostic and diagnostic value of CRP in patients with early graft dysfunction and predict 6-month and 12-month mortality in liver transplant recipients.

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Martin Zeier

University Hospital Heidelberg

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Paul Schnitzler

University Hospital Heidelberg

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