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Dive into the research topics where Nisreen S. Akel is active.

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Featured researches published by Nisreen S. Akel.


Bone | 2003

Interleukin-8 stimulation of osteoclastogenesis and bone resorption is a mechanism for the increased osteolysis of metastatic bone disease

Manali S. Bendre; Donna Montague; Terry Peery; Nisreen S. Akel; Dana Gaddy; Larry J. Suva

Interleukin 8 (IL-8) is a member of the alpha chemokine family of cytokines originally identified as a neutrophil chemoattractant. Recently, we reported that elevated levels of IL-8, but not parathyroid hormone-related protein (PTHrP), correlated with increased bone metastasis in a population of human breast cancer cells. We hypothesized that IL-8 expression by breast cancer cells would either indirectly influence osteoclastogenesis via nearby stromal cells or directly influence osteoclast differentiation and activity. In the present study, we investigated the role of IL-8 in the process of osteoclast formation and bone resorption, which is associated with metastatic breast cancer. The addition of recombinant human (rh) IL-8 (10 ng/ml) to cultures of stromal osteoblastic cells stimulated both RANKL mRNA expression and protein production, with no effect on the expression of osteoprotegerin. In addition, rhIL-8 also directly stimulated the differentiation of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells into bone-resorbing osteoclasts. In these cultures, IL-8 was able to stimulate human osteoclast formation even in the presence of excess (200 ng/ml) RANK-Fc. The effect of IL-8 on osteoclasts and their progenitors was associated with the cell surface expression of the IL-8-specific receptor (CXCR1) on the cells. These results demonstrate a direct effect of IL-8 on osteoclast differentiation and activity. Together, these data implicate IL-8 in the osteolysis associated with metastatic breast cancer.


Cancer Research | 2005

Tumor-Derived Interleukin-8 Stimulates Osteolysis Independent of the Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor-κB Ligand Pathway

Manali S. Bendre; Aaron G. Margulies; Brandon Walser; Nisreen S. Akel; Sudeepa Bhattacharrya; Robert A. Skinner; Frances L. Swain; Vishnu C. Ramani; Khalid S. Mohammad; Lisa L. Wessner; Alfredo Martínez; Theresa A. Guise; John M. Chirgwin; Dana Gaddy; Larry J. Suva

Bone is a common site of cancer metastasis. Breast, prostate, and lung cancers show a predilection to metastasize to bone. Recently, we reported that the chemokine interleukin 8 (IL-8) stimulates both human osteoclast formation and bone resorption. IL-8 mRNA expression was surveyed in a panel of human breast cancer lines MDA-MET, MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-435, MCF-7, T47D, and ZR-75, and the human lung adenocarcinoma cell line A549. IL-8 mRNA expression was higher in cell lines with higher osteolytic potential in vivo. Human osteoclast formation was increased by MDA-MET or A549 cell-conditioned medium, but not by MDA-MB-231. Pharmacologic doses of receptor activator of nuclear factor-kappaB (RANK)-Fc or osteoprotogerin had no effect on the pro-osteoclastogenic activity of the conditioned medium; however, osteoclast formation stimulated by conditioned medium was inhibited 60% by an IL-8-specific neutralizing antibody. The data support a model in which tumor cells cause osteolytic bone destruction independently of the RANK ligand (RANKL) pathway. Tumor-produced IL-8 is a major contributor to this process. The role of secreted IL-8 isoforms was examined by surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry, which detected distinct IL-8 isoforms secreted by MDA-MET and MDA-231 cells, suggesting different pro-osteoclastogenic activities of the two IL-8-derived peptides. These data indicate that (a) osteoclast formation induced by MDA-MET breast cancer cells and A549 adenocarcinoma cells is primarily mediated by IL-8, (b) cell-specific isoforms of IL-8 with distinct osteoclastogenic activities are produced by tumor cells, and (c) tumor cells that support osteoclast formation independent of RANKL secrete other pro-osteoclastogenic factors in addition to IL-8.


American Journal of Pathology | 2008

Platelet Dysfunction and a High Bone Mass Phenotype in a Murine Model of Platelet-Type von Willebrand Disease

Larry J. Suva; Eric Hartman; Joshua D. Dilley; Susan Russell; Nisreen S. Akel; Robert A. Skinner; William R. Hogue; Ulrich Budde; Kottayil I. Varughese; Taisuke Kanaji; Jerry Ware

The platelet glycoprotein Ib-IX receptor binds surface-bound von Willebrand factor and supports platelet adhesion to damaged vascular surfaces. A limited number of mutations within the glycoprotein Ib-IX complex have been described that permit a structurally altered receptor to interact with soluble von Willebrand factor, and this is the molecular basis of platelet-type von Willebrand disease. We have developed and characterized a mouse model of platelet-type von Willebrand disease (G233V) and have confirmed a platelet phenotype mimicking the human disorder. The mice have a dramatic increase in splenic megakaryocytes and splenomegaly. Recent studies have demonstrated that hematopoetic cells can influence the differentiation of osteogenic cells. Thus, we examined the skeletal phenotype of mice expressing the G233V variant complex. At 6 months of age, G233V mice exhibit a high bone mass phenotype with an approximate doubling of trabecular bone volume in both the tibia and femur. Serum measures of bone resorption were significantly decreased in G233V animals. With decreased bone resorption, cortical thickness was increased, medullary area decreased, and consequently, the mechanical strength of the femur was significantly increased. Using ex vivo bone marrow cultures, osteoclast-specific staining in the G233V mutant marrow was diminished, whereas osteoblastogenesis was unaffected. These studies provide new insights into the relationship between the regulation of megakaryocytopoiesis and bone mass.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2010

Bone turnover across the menopause transition The role of gonadal inhibins

Kristy M. Nicks; Tristan W. Fowler; Nisreen S. Akel; Daniel S. Perrien; Larry J. Suva; Dana Gaddy

Accumulating evidence demonstrates increasing bone turnover and bone loss in women prior to menopause and decreases in serum estradiol levels. Increased follicle‐stimulating hormone levels have been correlated with some of these peri‐menopausal changes. However, decreases in gonadal inhibins of the transforming growth factor (TGF)‐β superfamily strongly correlate with increases in bone formation and resorption markers across the menopause transition and predict lumbar bone mass in peri‐menopausal women, likely as a result of direct inhibin suppression of osteoblastogenesis and osteoclastogenesis. Inhibins bind specifically to cells during osteoblastogenesis and osteoclastogenesis. They can block bone morphogenetic protein (BMP)‐stimulated osteoblast and osteoclast development as well as BMP‐stimulated SMAD1 phosphorylation, likely via inhibin–β‐glycan sequestration of BMP Type II receptor (BMPRII). Interestingly, continuous in vivo exposure to inhibin A is anabolic and protective against gonadectomy‐induced bone loss in mice, suggesting that inhibins contribute to the endocrine regulation of bone metabolism via a bimodal mechanism of action whereby cycling inhibin exposure suppresses bone turnover and continuous exposure to inhibins is anabolic.


Endocrinology | 2010

The Somatotrope as a Metabolic Sensor: Deletion of Leptin Receptors Causes Obesity

Gwen V. Childs; Noor Akhter; Anessa Haney; Mohsin Md. Syed; Angela K. Odle; Michael A. Cozart; Zachary Brodrick; Dana Gaddy; Larry J. Suva; Nisreen S. Akel; Christopher Crane; Helen Beneš; Amanda Charlesworth; Raúl M. Luque; Streamson C. Chua; Rhonda D. Kineman

Leptin, the product of the Lep gene, reports levels of adiposity to the hypothalamus and other regulatory cells, including pituitary somatotropes, which secrete GH. Leptin deficiency is associated with a decline in somatotrope numbers and function, suggesting that leptin may be important in their maintenance. This hypothesis was tested in a new animal model in which exon 17 of the leptin receptor (Lepr) protein was selectively deleted in somatotropes by Cre-loxP technology. Organ genotyping confirmed the recombination of the floxed LepR allele only in the pituitary. Deletion mutant mice showed a 72% reduction in pituitary cells bearing leptin receptor (LEPR)-b, a 43% reduction in LEPR proteins and a 60% reduction in percentages of immunopositive GH cells, which correlated with reduced serum GH. In mutants, LEPR expression by other pituitary cells was like that of normal animals. Leptin stimulated phosphorylated Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 expression in somatotropes from normal animals but not from mutants. Pituitary weights, cell numbers, IGF-I, and the timing of puberty were not different from control values. Growth curves were normal during the first 3 months. Deletion mutant mice became approximately 30-46% heavier than controls with age, which was attributed to an increase in fat mass. Serum leptin levels were either normal in younger animals or reflected the level of obesity in older animals. The specific ablation of the Lepr exon 17 gene in somatotropes resulted in GH deficiency with a consequential reduction in lipolytic activity normally maintained by GH and increased adiposity.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2009

Regulation of osteoblastogenesis and osteoclastogenesis by the other reproductive hormones, Activin and Inhibin

Kristy M. Nicks; Daniel S. Perrien; Nisreen S. Akel; Larry J. Suva; Dana Gaddy

There is both cellular and physiological evidence demonstrating that both Activins and Inhibins regulate osteoblastogenesis and osteoclastogenesis, and regulate bone mass in vivo. Although Activins and Inhibins were initially isolated from the gonad, Activins are also produced and stored in bone, whereas Inhibins exert their regulation on bone cell differentiation and metabolism via endocrine effects. The accumulating data provide evidence that reproductive hormones, distinct from classical sex steroids, are important regulators of bone mass and bone strength. Given the well described dominant antagonism of Inhibin over Activin, as well as over BMPs and TGFbeta, the gonadally derived Inhibins are important regulators of locally produced osteotrophic factors. Thus, the cycling Inhibins in females and diurnal changes in Inhibin B in males elicit temporal shifts in Inhibin levels (tone) that de-repress the pituitary. This fundamental action has the potential to de-repress locally stimulated changes in osteoblastogenesis and osteoclastogenesis, thereby altering bone metabolism.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Low bone turnover and low BMD in Down syndrome: effect of intermittent PTH treatment.

Tristan W. Fowler; Kent D. McKelvey; Nisreen S. Akel; Jaclyn Vander Schilden; Anthony W. Bacon; John W. Bracey; Timothy Sowder; Robert A. Skinner; Frances L. Swain; William R. Hogue; Donna B. Leblanc; Dana Gaddy; Galen R. Wenger; Larry J. Suva

Trisomy 21 affects virtually every organ system and results in the complex clinical presentation of Down syndrome (DS). Patterns of differences are now being recognized as patients’ age and these patterns bring about new opportunities for disease prevention and treatment. Low bone mineral density (BMD) has been reported in many studies of males and females with DS yet the specific effects of trisomy 21 on the skeleton remain poorly defined. Therefore we determined the bone phenotype and measured bone turnover markers in the murine DS model Ts65Dn. Male Ts65Dn DS mice are infertile and display a profound low bone mass phenotype that deteriorates with age. The low bone mass was correlated with significantly decreased osteoblast and osteoclast development, decreased bone biochemical markers, a diminished bone formation rate and reduced mechanical strength. The low bone mass observed in 3 month old Ts65Dn mice was significantly increased after 4 weeks of intermittent PTH treatment. These studies provide novel insight into the cause of the profound bone fragility in DS and identify PTH as a potential anabolic agent in the adult low bone mass DS population.


Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2012

Inhibin A enhances bone formation during distraction osteogenesis

Daniel S. Perrien; Kristy M. Nicks; Lichu Liu; Nisreen S. Akel; Anthony W. Bacon; Robert A. Skinner; Frances L. Swain; James Aronson; Larry J. Suva; Dana Gaddy

Given the aging population and the increased incidence of fracture in the elderly population, the need exists for agents that can enhance bone healing, particularly in situations of delayed fracture healing and/or non‐union. Our previous studies demonstrated that overexpression of the gonadal peptide, human inhibin A (hInhA), in transgenic mice enhances bone formation and strength via increased osteoblast activity. We tested the hypothesis that hInhA can also exert anabolic effects in a murine model of distraction osteogenesis (DO), using both transgenic hInhA overexpression and administration of normal physiological levels of hInhA in adult male Swiss‐Webster mice. Tibial osteotomies and external ring fixation were performed, followed by a 3‐day latency period, 14‐day distraction, and sacrifice on day 18. Supraphysiological levels of hInhA in transgenic mice, but not normal physiological levels of hInhA, significantly increased endosteal bone formation and mineralized bone area in the distraction gap, as determined by radiographic and µCT analysis. Significantly, increased PCNA and osteocalcin expression in the primary matrix front suggested that hInhA increased osteoblast proliferation. This mechanism is consistent with the effects of other agents and pathologies that modulate bone formation during DO, and demonstrates the potential of hInhA to enhance bone repair and regeneration.


Bone | 2014

Circulating interleukin-8 levels explain breast cancer osteolysis in mice and humans.

Archana Kamalakar; Manali S. Bendre; Charity L. Washam; Tristan W. Fowler; Adam A. Carver; Joshua D. Dilley; John W. Bracey; Nisreen S. Akel; Aaron G. Margulies; Robert A. Skinner; Frances L. Swain; William R. Hogue; Corey O. Montgomery; Parshawn Lahiji; Jacqueline J. Maher; Kim Leitzel; Suhail M. Ali; Alan Lipton; Richard W. Nicholas; Dana Gaddy; Larry J. Suva

Skeletal metastases of breast cancer and subsequent osteolysis connote a dramatic change in the prognosis for the patient and significantly increase the morbidity associated with disease. The cytokine interleukin 8 (IL-8/CXCL8) is able to directly stimulate osteoclastogenesis and bone resorption in mouse models of breast cancer bone metastasis. In this study, we determined whether circulating levels of IL-8 were associated with increased bone resorption and breast cancer bone metastasis in patients and investigated IL-8 action in vitro and in vivo in mice. Using breast cancer patient plasma (36 patients), we identified significantly elevated IL-8 levels in bone metastasis patients compared with patients lacking bone metastasis (p<0.05), as well as a correlation between plasma IL-8 and increased bone resorption (p<0.05), as measured by NTx levels. In a total of 22 ER+ and 15 ER- primary invasive ductal carcinomas, all cases examined stained positive for IL-8 expression. In vitro, human MDA-MB-231 and MDA-MET breast cancer cell lines secrete two distinct IL-8 isoforms, both of which were found to stimulate osteoclastogenesis. However, the more osteolytic MDA-MET-derived full length IL-8(1-77) had significantly higher potency than the non-osteolytic MDA-MB-231-derived IL-8(6-77), via the CXCR1 receptor. MDA-MET breast cancer cells were injected into the tibia of nude mice and 7days later treated daily with a neutralizing IL-8 monoclonal antibody. All tumor-injected mice receiving no antibody developed large osteolytic bone tumors, whereas 83% of the IL-8 antibody-treated mice had no evidence of tumor at the end of 28days and had significantly increased survival. The pro-osteoclastogenic activity of IL-8 in vivo was confirmed when transgenic mice expressing human IL-8 were examined and found to have a profound osteopenic phenotype, with elevated bone resorption and inherently low bone mass. Collectively, these data suggest that IL-8 plays an important role in breast cancer osteolysis and that anti-IL-8 therapy may be useful in the treatment of the skeletal related events associated with breast cancer.


Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine | 2011

Pressure Hyperalgesia in Hind Limb Suspended Rats

Parimal Chowdhury; Michael E. Soulsby; John Jayroe; Nisreen S. Akel; Dana Gaddy; Maxim Dobretsov

INTRODUCTION Spaceflight and simulated microgravity often associate with pain and prediabetes. Streptozotocin (STZ)-induced moderate insulinopenia rat models of prediabetes result in pressure hyperalgesia. The current study was designed to determine whether or not simulated microgravity induced by hind limb suspension (HLS) in rats lead to insulinopenia and pressure hyperalgesia. METHODS Adult male rats were divided into HLS (N = 20) and control, non-suspended (N = 16) groups, respectively. Bodyweight and hind limb pressure-pain withdrawal threshold (PPT) were measured at regular 2-5 d intervals for 7 d before and 12-13 d after HLS. RESULTS Bodyweights and PPT of control and HLS animals measured on the day of suspension were not different. During the experiment, control rats gained 61 +/- 5 g, but maintained their PPT at the baseline level. Suspended rats gained 26 +/- 3 g of weight during the same time period and their PPT declined from 105 +/- 6 g to 84 +/- 6 g. Neither blood glucose nor pancreatic islet density and area were affected by HLS. However, the random plasma insulin of HLS rats was significantly lower than that of control animals (1.6 +/- 0.2 vs. 2.7 +/- 0.2 ng ml(-1)). DISCUSSION The observed relationship between insulin and PPT levels in the HLS rats was similar to that observed in rats with STZ-induced insulinopenia. These data suggest that moderate insulinopenia may affect the rats sensitivity to deep pressure directly, without affecting glucose homeostasis. In addition, our data suggest that HLS rats may develop peripheral neuropathy.

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Dana Gaddy

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Robert A. Skinner

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Frances L. Swain

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Archana Kamalakar

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Daniel S. Perrien

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Manali S. Bendre

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Tristan W. Fowler

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Kristy M. Nicks

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Maxim Dobretsov

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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