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Dive into the research topics where Shereen Nizari is active.

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Featured researches published by Shereen Nizari.


Cell Death and Disease | 2010

Imaging multiple phases of neurodegeneration: a novel approach to assessing cell death in vivo.

M. F. Cordeiro; Li Guo; K M Coxon; James Duggan; Shereen Nizari; Eduardo Normando; S L Sensi; Adam M. Sillito; F.W. Fitzke; T.E. Salt; Stephen E. Moss

Nerve cell death is the key event in all neurodegenerative disorders, with apoptosis and necrosis being central to both acute and chronic degenerative processes. However, until now, it has not been possible to study these dynamically and in real time. In this study, we use spectrally distinct, well-recognised fluorescent cell death markers to enable the temporal resolution and quantification of the early and late phases of apoptosis and necrosis of single nerve cells in different disease models. The tracking of single-cell death profiles in the same living eye over hours, days, weeks and months is a significant advancement on currently available techniques. We identified a numerical preponderance of late-phase versus early-phase apoptotic cells in chronic models, reinforcing the commonalities between cellular mechanisms in different disease models. We showed that MK801 effectively inhibited both apoptosis and necrosis, but our findings support the use of our technique to investigate more specific anti-apoptotic and anti-necrotic strategies with well-defined targets, with potentially greater clinical application. The optical properties of the eye provide compelling opportunities for the quantitative monitoring of disease mechanisms and dynamics in experimental neurodegeneration. Our findings also help to directly observe retinal nerve cell death in patients as an adjunct to refining diagnosis, tracking disease status and assessing therapeutic intervention.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2010

Tracking Longitudinal Retinal Changes in Experimental Ocular Hypertension Using the cSLO and Spectral Domain-OCT

Li Guo; Eduardo Normando; Shereen Nizari; David Lara; M. F. Cordeiro

PURPOSE Involvement of the outer retina is controversial in glaucoma. The aim of this study was to test, first, whether the outer retina is affected in experimental ocular hypertension (OHT) and, second, whether whole retinal thickness can be used as a surrogate marker of glaucomatous change. METHODS OHT was surgically induced in 20 Dark Agouti rats. Animals were imaged using a modified Spectralis OCT (Heidelberg Engineering, Heidelberg, Germany) at baseline and at 3 and 8 weeks after OHT induction. Measurements were recorded for whole and individual retinal layer thickness in four regions-temporal, superior, nasal, and inferior-around the optic nerve head. RESULTS Whole retinal thickness in normal eyes was 172.19 ± 5.17 μm, with no significant regional differences. OHT caused a significant reduction in whole retinal thickness and the outer nuclear layer (ONL) at 3 and 8 weeks (P < 0.05), along with the expected thinning of the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL). Whole retinal thickness correlated well with RNFL (P = 0.035) and ONL (P ≤ 0.001) changes. Sensitivity of RNFL and ONL to IOP exposure appeared greater at 3 than at 8 weeks. In addition, regional profiles were significantly altered in the ONL and RNFL after OHT induction. CONCLUSIONS Adaptation of the Spectralis OCT enables tracking of structural damage in experimental rat OHT. Here the authors show evidence of glaucomatous damage in the outer retinal layers of this model with significant regional changes and highlight whole retinal thickness in the rat as a useful surrogate marker of inner and outer retinal changes. The authors believe that the OCT data can provide useful information with regard to clinical management.


Small | 2014

Topical Delivery of Avastin to the Posterior Segment of the Eye In Vivo Using Annexin A5-associated Liposomes

Benjamin Davis; Eduardo Normando; Li Guo; Lisa A. Turner; Shereen Nizari; Paul O'Shea; Stephen E. Moss; Satyanarayana Somavarapu; M Francesca Cordeiro

Effective delivery to the retina is presently one of the most challenging areas in drug development in ophthalmology, due to anatomical barriers preventing entry of therapeutic substances. Intraocular injection is presently the only route of administration for large protein therapeutics, including the anti-Vascular Endothelial Growth Factors Lucentis (ranibizumab) and Avastin (bevacizumab). Anti-VEGFs have revolutionised the management of age-related macular degeneration and have increasing indications for use as sight-saving therapies in diabetes and retinal vascular disease. Considerable resources have been allocated to develop non-invasive ocular drug delivery systems. It has been suggested that the anionic phospholipid binding protein annexin A5, may have a role in drug delivery. In the present study we demonstrate, using a combination of in vitro and in vivo assays, that the presence of annexin A5 can significantly enhance uptake and transcytosis of liposomal drug carrier systems across corneal epithelial barriers. This system is employed to deliver physiologically significant concentrations of Avastin to the posterior of the rat eye (127 ng/g) and rabbit retina (18 ng/g) after topical application. Our observations provide evidence to suggest annexin A5 mediated endocytosis can enhance the delivery of associated lipidic drug delivery vehicles across biological barriers, which may have therapeutic implications.


Cell Death and Disease | 2014

Direct optic nerve sheath (DONS) application of Schwann cells prolongs retinal ganglion cell survival in vivo.

Li Guo; Benjamin Davis; Shereen Nizari; Eduardo Normando; H Shi; Joana Galvao; Lisa A. Turner; J Shi; Melanie Clements; Simona Parrinello; M. F. Cordeiro

Cell-based therapies are increasingly recognized as a potential strategy to treat retinal neurodegenerative disease. Their administration, however, is normally indirect and complex, often with an inability to assess in real time their effects on cell death and their migration/integration into the host retina. In the present study, using a partial optic nerve transection (pONT) rat model, we describe a new method of Schwann cell (SC) delivery (direct application to injured optic nerve sheath, SC/DONS), which was compared with intravitreal SC delivery (SC/IVT). Both SC/DONS and SC/IVT were able to be assessed in vivo using imaging to visualize retinal ganglion cell (RGC) apoptosis and SC retinal integration. RGC death in the pONT model was best fitted to the one-phase exponential decay model. Although both SC/DONS and SC/IVT altered the temporal course of RGC degeneration in pONT, SC/DONS resulted in delayed but long-lasting effects on RGC protection, compared with SC/IVT treatment. In addition, their effects on primary and secondary degeneration, and axonal regeneration, were also investigated, by histology, whole retinal counting, and modelling of RGC loss. SC/DONS was found to significantly reduce RGC apoptosis in vivo and significantly increase RGC survival by targeting secondary rather than primary degeneration. Both SC/DONS and SC/IVT were found to promote RGC axonal regrowth after optic nerve injury, with evidence of GAP-43 expression in RGC somas and axons. SC/DONS may have the potential in the treatment of optic neuropathies, such as glaucoma. We show that SC transplantation can be monitored in real time and that the protective effects of SCs are associated with targeting secondary degeneration, with implications for translating cell-based therapies to the clinic.


Cell Death and Disease | 2016

Non-amyloidogenic effects of α2 adrenergic agonists: implications for brimonidine-mediated neuroprotection.

Shereen Nizari; Li Guo; Benjamin Davis; Eduardo Normando; Joana Galvao; Lisa A. Turner; Mukhtar Bizrah; Mohammad H Dehabadi; Kailin Tian; M Francesca Cordeiro

The amyloid beta (Aβ) pathway is strongly implicated in neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimers disease and more recently, glaucoma. Here, we identify the α2 adrenergic receptor agonists (α2ARA) used to lower intraocular pressure can prevent retinal ganglion cell (RGC) death via the non-amyloidogenic Aβ-pathway. Neuroprotective effects were confirmed in vivo and in vitro in different glaucoma-related models using α2ARAs brimonidine (BMD), clonidine (Clo) and dexmedetomidine. α2ARA treatment significantly reduced RGC apoptosis in experimental-glaucoma models by 97.7% and 92.8% (BMD, P<0.01) and 98% and 92.3% (Clo, P<0.01)) at 3 and 8 weeks, respectively. A reduction was seen in an experimental Aβ-induced neurotoxicity model (67% BMD and 88.6% Clo, both P<0.01, respectively), and in vitro, where α2ARAs significantly (P<0.05) prevented cell death, under both hypoxic (CoCl2) and stress (UV) conditions. In experimental-glaucoma, BMD induced ninefold and 25-fold and 36-fold and fourfold reductions in Aβ and amyloid precursor protein (APP) levels at 3 and 8 weeks, respectively, in the RGC layer, with similar results with Clo, and in vitro with all three α2ARAs. BMD significantly increased soluble APPα (sAPPα) levels at 3 and 8 weeks (2.1 and 1.6-fold) in vivo and in vitro with the CoCl2 and UV-light insults. Furthermore, treatment of UV-insulted cells with an sAPPα antibody significantly reduced cell viability compared with BMD-treated control (52%), co-treatment (33%) and untreated control (27%). Finally, we show that α2ARAs modulate levels of laminin and MMP-9 in RGCs, potentially linked to changes in Aβ through APP processing. Together, these results provide new evidence that α2ARAs are neuroprotective through their effects on the Aβ pathway and sAPPα, which to our knowledge, is the first description. Studies have identified the need for α-secretase activators and sAPPα-mimetics in neurodegeneration; α2ARAs, already clinically available, present a promising therapy, with applications not only to reducing RGC death in glaucoma but also other neurodegenerative processes involving Aβ.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2014

A semi-automated technique for labeling and counting of apoptosing retinal cells

Mukhtar Bizrah; Steve C Dakin; Li Guo; Farzana Rahman; Miles Parnell; Eduardo Normando; Shereen Nizari; Benjamin Davis; Ahmed Younis; M Francesca Cordeiro

BackgroundRetinal ganglion cell (RGC) loss is one of the earliest and most important cellular changes in glaucoma. The DARC (Detection of Apoptosing Retinal Cells) technology enables in vivo real-time non-invasive imaging of single apoptosing retinal cells in animal models of glaucoma and Alzheimer’s disease. To date, apoptosing RGCs imaged using DARC have been counted manually. This is time-consuming, labour-intensive, vulnerable to bias, and has considerable inter- and intra-operator variability.ResultsA semi-automated algorithm was developed which enabled automated identification of apoptosing RGCs labeled with fluorescent Annexin-5 on DARC images. Automated analysis included a pre-processing stage involving local-luminance and local-contrast “gain control”, a “blob analysis” step to differentiate between cells, vessels and noise, and a method to exclude non-cell structures using specific combined ‘size’ and ‘aspect’ ratio criteria. Apoptosing retinal cells were counted by 3 masked operators, generating ‘Gold-standard’ mean manual cell counts, and were also counted using the newly developed automated algorithm. Comparison between automated cell counts and the mean manual cell counts on 66 DARC images showed significant correlation between the two methods (Pearson’s correlation coefficient 0.978 (p < 0.001), R Squared = 0.956. The Intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.986 (95% CI 0.977-0.991, p < 0.001), and Cronbach’s alpha measure of consistency = 0.986, confirming excellent correlation and consistency. No significant difference (p = 0.922, 95% CI: −5.53 to 6.10) was detected between the cell counts of the two methods.ConclusionsThe novel automated algorithm enabled accurate quantification of apoptosing RGCs that is highly comparable to manual counting, and appears to minimise operator-bias, whilst being both fast and reproducible. This may prove to be a valuable method of quantifying apoptosing retinal cells, with particular relevance to translation in the clinic, where a Phase I clinical trial of DARC in glaucoma patients is due to start shortly.


Acta neuropathologica communications | 2016

The retina as an early biomarker of neurodegeneration in a rotenone-induced model of Parkinson’s disease: evidence for a neuroprotective effect of rosiglitazone in the eye and brain

Eduardo Normando; Benjamin Davis; Lies De Groef; Shereen Nizari; Lisa A. Turner; Nivedita Ravindran; Milena Pahlitzsch; Jonathan Brenton; Giulia Malaguarnera; Li Guo; Satyanarayana Somavarapu; M. F. Cordeiro


European Ophthalmic Review | 2010

Realtime Imaging of Retinal Ganglion Cell Apoptosis

M. F. Cordeiro; Li Guo; Katy M. Coxon; James Duggan; Shereen Nizari; Eduardo Normando; Françoise Russo-Marie; Clive Migdal; Philip Bloom; Frederick W. Fitzke; Stephen E. Moss


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015

CoQ10 reduces Vitamin E-TPGS toxicity effects in primary retinal cell culture

Ben Davis; Kailin Tian; Lisa Turner; Shereen Nizari; Giulia Malaguarnera; M Francesca Cordeiro


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015

A fully automatic ex-vivo Brn3a retinal segmentation algorithm describing the pattern of regional RGC loss in a rat ocular hypertension model

Lawrence Langley; Ben Davis; Li Guo; Lisa Turner; Shereen Nizari; M Francesca Cordeiro

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Li Guo

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Eduardo Normando

Imperial College Healthcare

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M Francesca Cordeiro

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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M. F. Cordeiro

Imperial College Healthcare

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Benjamin Davis

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Joana Galvao

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Ben Davis

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Lisa A. Turner

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Lisa Turner

Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital

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Farzana Rahman

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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