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Dive into the research topics where Zahra El-Schich is active.

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Featured researches published by Zahra El-Schich.


Clinical Genetics | 2012

Corpus callosum abnormalities, intellectual disability, speech impairment, and autism in patients with haploinsufficiency of ARID1B

Christina Halgren; Susanne Kjaergaard; Mads Bak; C. Hansen; Zahra El-Schich; Cm Anderson; Karen Friis Henriksen; Helle Hjalgrim; Maria Kirchhoff; Emilia K. Bijlsma; Maartje Nielsen; N.S. den Hollander; Cal Ruivenkamp; Bertrand Isidor; C Le Caignec; R Zannolli; Mafalda Mucciolo; Alessandra Renieri; Francesca Mari; B-M Anderlid; Joris Andrieux; A Dieux; Niels Tommerup; Iben Bache

Halgren C, Kjaergaard S, Bak M, Hansen C, El‐Schich Z, Anderson CM, Henriksen KF, Hjalgrim H, Kirchhoff M, Bijlsma EK, Nielsen M, den Hollander NS, Ruivenkamp CAL, Isidor B, Le Caignec C, Zannolli R, Mucciolo M, Renieri A, Mari F, Anderlid B‐M, Andrieux J, Dieux A, Tommerup N, Bache I. Corpus callosum abnormalities, intellectual disability, speech impairment, and autism in patients with haploinsufficiency of ARID1B.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Sialic Acid-Imprinted Fluorescent Core–Shell Particles for Selective Labeling of Cell Surface Glycans

Sudhirkumar Shinde; Zahra El-Schich; Atena Malakpour; Wei Wan; Nishtman Dizeyi; Reza Mohammadi; Knut Rurack; Anette Gjörloff Wingren; Börje Sellergren

The expression of cell surface glycans terminating with sialic acid (SA) residues has been found to correlate with various disease states there among cancer. We here report a novel strategy for specific fluorescence labeling of such motifs. This is based on sialic acid-imprinted core-shell nanoparticles equipped with nitrobenzoxadiazole (NBD) fluorescent reporter groups allowing environmentally sensitive fluorescence detection at convenient excitation and emission wavelengths. Imprinting was achieved exploiting a hybrid approach combining reversible boronate ester formation between p-vinylphenylboronic acid and SA, the introduction of cationic amine functionalities, and the use of an NBD-appended urea-monomer as a binary hydrogen-bond donor targeting the SA carboxylic acid and OH functionalities. The monomers were grafted from 200 nm RAFT-modified silica core particles using ethylene glycol dimethacrylate (EGDMA) as cross-linker resulting in a shell thickness of ca. 10 nm. The particles displayed strong affinity for SA in methanol/water mixtures (K = 6.6 × 10(5) M(-1) in 2% water, 5.9 × 10(3) M(-1) in 98% water, B(max) ≈ 10 μmol g(-1)), whereas binding of the competitor glucuronic acid (GA) and other monosaccharides was considerably weaker (K (GA) = 1.8 × 10(3) M(-1) in 98% water). In cell imaging experiments, the particles selectively stained different cell lines in correlation with the SA expression level. This was further verified by enzymatic cleavage of SA and by staining using a FITC labeled SA selective lectin.


Holography : basic principles and contemporary applications | 2013

Cells and Holograms – Holograms and Digital Holographic Microscopy as a Tool to Study the Morphology of Living Cells

Kersti Alm; Zahra El-Schich; Maria Falck Miniotis; Anette Gjörloff Wingren; Birgit Janicke; Stina Oredsson

Digital holographic microscopy (DHM) is an emerging high-resolution imaging technique that offers real-time imaging and quantitative measurements of physiological parameters without any staining or labeling of cells. The first DHM images of living cells were obtained 8-10 years ago [1, 2]. Analysis of human hepatocytes showed that DHM was a versatile tool for in vivo cell analysis by using quantitative amplitude and phase-contrast imaging with very high resolution [1]. Another study showed that the quantitative distribution of the opti‐ cal path length created by transparent specimens contained information concerning both morphology and refractive index of the observed mouse cortical neurons [2]. This could on‐ ly be measured by DHM and not by phase contrast and Nomarski’s differential interference contrast (DIC) microscopy. In addition, the high sensitivity of these phase-shift measure‐ ments enables sub-wavelength axial accuracy, offering attractive possibilities for the visuali‐ zation of cellular dynamics.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2015

Induction of morphological changes in death-induced cancer cells monitored by holographic microscopy

Zahra El-Schich; Anna Mölder; Helena Tassidis; Pirkko Härkönen; Maria Falck Miniotis; Anette Gjörloff Wingren

We are using the label-free technique of holographic microscopy to analyze cellular parameters including cell number, confluence, cellular volume and area directly in the cell culture environment. We show that death-induced cells can be distinguished from untreated counterparts by the use of holographic microscopy, and we demonstrate its capability for cell death assessment. Morphological analysis of two representative cell lines (L929 and DU145) was performed in the culture flasks without any prior cell detachment. The two cell lines were treated with the anti-tumour agent etoposide for 1-3days. Measurements by holographic microscopy showed significant differences in average cell number, confluence, volume and area when comparing etoposide-treated with untreated cells. The cell volume of the treated cell lines was initially increased at early time-points. By time, cells decreased in volume, especially when treated with high doses of etoposide. In conclusion, we have shown that holographic microscopy allows label-free and completely non-invasive morphological measurements of cell growth, viability and death. Future applications could include real-time monitoring of these holographic microscopy parameters in cells in response to clinically relevant compounds.


Biofouling | 2014

Influence of substratum hydrophobicity on salivary pellicles: organization or composition?

Watcharapong Aroonsang; Javier Sotres; Zahra El-Schich; Thomas Arnebrant; Liselott Lindh

Different physico-chemical properties (eg adsorption kinetics, thickness, viscoelasticity, and mechanical stability) of adsorbed salivary pellicles depend on different factors, including the properties (eg charge, roughness, wettability, and surface chemistry) of the substratum. Whether these differences in the physico-chemical properties are a result of differences in the composition or in the organization of the pellicles is not known. In this work, the influence of substratum wettability on the composition of the pellicle was studied. For this purpose, pellicles eluted from substrata of different but well-characterized wettabilities were examined by means of sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The results showed that substratum hydrophobicity did not have a major impact on pellicle composition. In all substrata, the major pellicle components were found to be cystatins, amylases and large glycoproteins, presumably mucins. In turn, interpretation of previously reported data based on the present results suggests that variations in substratum wettability mostly affect the organization of the pellicle components.


Journal of medical imaging | 2017

Supervised classification of etoposide-treated in vitro adherent cells based on noninvasive imaging morphology

Anna Mölder; Johan Persson; Zahra El-Schich; Silvester Czanner; Anette Gjörloff Wingren

Abstract. Single-cell studies using noninvasive imaging is a challenging, yet appealing way to study cellular characteristics over extended periods of time, for instance to follow cell interactions and the behavior of different cell types within the same sample. In some cases, e.g., transplantation culturing, real-time cellular monitoring, stem cell studies, in vivo studies, and embryo growth studies, it is also crucial to keep the sample intact and invasive imaging using fluorophores or dyes is not an option. Computerized methods are needed to improve throughput of image-based analysis and for use with noninvasive microscopy such methods are poorly developed. By combining a set of well-documented image analysis and classification tools with noninvasive microscopy, we demonstrate the ability for long-term image-based analysis of morphological changes in single cells as induced by a toxin, and show how these changes can be used to indicate changes in biological function. In this study, adherent cell cultures of DU-145 treated with low-concentration (LC) etoposide were imaged during 3 days. Single cells were identified by image segmentation and subsequently classified on image features, extracted for each cell. In parallel with image analysis, an MTS assay was performed to allow comparison between metabolic activity and morphological changes after long-term low-level drug response. Results show a decrease in proliferation rate for LC etoposide, accompanied by changes in cell morphology, primarily leading to an increase in cell area and textural changes. It is shown that changes detected by image analysis are already visible on day 1 for 0.25-μM etoposide, whereas effects on MTS and viability are detected only on day 3 for 5-μM etoposide concentration, leading to the conclusion that the morphological changes observed occur before and at lower concentrations than a reduction in cell metabolic activity or viability. Three classifiers are compared and we report a best case sensitivity of 88% and specificity of 94% for classification of cells as treated/untreated.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Sequence and expression analysis of gaps in human chromosome 20

Sheroy Minocherhomji; Stefan E. Seemann; Y. Mang; Zahra El-Schich; Mads Bak; Claus Bech Hansen; Nickolas Papadopoulos; Knud Josefsen; Henrik Nielsen; Jan Gorodkin; Niels Tommerup; Asli Silahtaroglu

The finished human genome-assemblies comprise several hundred un-sequenced euchromatic gaps, which may be rich in long polypurine/polypyrimidine stretches. Human chromosome 20 (chr 20) currently has three unfinished gaps remaining on its q-arm. All three gaps are within gene-dense regions and/or overlap disease-associated loci, including the DLGAP4 locus. In this study, we sequenced ∼99% of all three unfinished gaps on human chr 20, determined their complete genomic sizes and assessed epigenetic profiles using a combination of Sanger sequencing, mate pair paired-end high-throughput sequencing and chromatin, methylation and expression analyses. We found histone 3 trimethylated at Lysine 27 to be distributed across all three gaps in immortalized B-lymphocytes. In one gap, five novel CpG islands were predominantly hypermethylated in genomic DNA from peripheral blood lymphocytes and human cerebellum. One of these CpG islands was differentially methylated and paternally hypermethylated. We found all chr 20 gaps to comprise structured non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) and to be conserved in primates. We verified expression for 13 candidate ncRNAs, some of which showed tissue specificity. Four ncRNAs expressed within the gap at DLGAP4 show elevated expression in the human brain. Our data suggest that unfinished human genome gaps are likely to comprise numerous functional elements.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2018

Risks and Recommendations in Prenatally Detected De Novo Balanced Chromosomal Rearrangements from Assessment of Long-Term Outcomes

Christina Halgren; Nete Munk Nielsen; Lusine Nazaryan-Petersen; Asli Silahtaroglu; Ryan L. Collins; Chelsea Lowther; Susanne Kjaergaard; Morten Frisch; Maria Kirchhoff; Karen Brøndum-Nielsen; Allan Lind-Thomsen; Yuan Mang; Zahra El-Schich; Claire A. Boring; Mana M. Mehrjouy; Peter Jensen; Christina Fagerberg; Lotte Nylandsted Krogh; Jan Hansen; Thue Bryndorf; Claus Hansen; Michael E. Talkowski; Mads Bak; Niels Tommerup; Iben Bache

The 6%-9% risk of an untoward outcome previously established by Warburton for prenatally detected de novo balanced chromosomal rearrangements (BCRs) does not account for long-term morbidity. We performed long-term follow-up (mean 17 years) of a registry-based nationwide cohort of 41 individuals carrying a prenatally detected de novo BCR with normal first trimester screening/ultrasound scan. We observed a significantly higher frequency of neurodevelopmental and/or neuropsychiatric disorders than in a matched control group (19.5% versus 8.3%, p = 0.04), which was increased to 26.8% upon clinical follow-up. Chromosomal microarray of 32 carriers revealed no pathogenic imbalances, illustrating a low prognostic value when fetal ultrasound scan is normal. In contrast, mate-pair sequencing revealed disrupted genes (ARID1B, NPAS3, CELF4), regulatory domains of known developmental genes (ZEB2, HOXC), and complex BCRs associated with adverse outcomes. Seven unmappable autosomal-autosomal BCRs with breakpoints involving pericentromeric/heterochromatic regions may represent a low-risk group. We performed independent phenotype-aware and blinded interpretation, which accurately predicted benign outcomes (specificity = 100%) but demonstrated relatively low sensitivity for prediction of the clinical outcome in affected carriers (sensitivity = 45%-55%). This sensitivity emphasizes the challenges associated with prenatal risk prediction for long-term morbidity in the absence of phenotypic data given the still immature annotation of the morbidity genome and poorly understood long-range regulatory mechanisms. In conclusion, we upwardly revise the previous estimates of Warburton to a morbidity risk of 27% and recommend sequencing of the chromosomal breakpoints as the first-tier diagnostic test in pregnancies with a de novo BCR.


Tumor Biology | 2016

Different expression levels of glycans on leukemic cells—a novel screening method with molecularly imprinted polymers (MIP) targeting sialic acid

Zahra El-Schich; Mohammad Abdullah; Sudhirkumar Shinde; Nishtman Dizeyi; Anders Rosén; Börje Sellergren; Anette Gjörloff Wingren

Sialic acid (SA) is normally expressed on the cell membranes and is located at the terminal position of the sugar chains. SA plays an important role for regulation of the innate immunity, function as markers of the cells and can be recognized by a variety of receptors. Interestingly, the level of SA expression is increased on metastatic cancer cells. The availability of specific antibodies against SA is limited and, therefore, biomarker tools for detection of SA are lacking. We have recently presented a novel method for specific fluorescence labeling of SA molecular imprinted polymers (MIP). Here, we have performed an extended screening of SA expression by using SA-MIP and included four different chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) cell lines, conveniently analyzed by flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy. SA expression was detected in four cell lines at different levels, and the SA expression were verified with lectin-FITC. These results show that SA-MIP can be used as a plastic antibody for detection of SA using both flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy. We suggest that SA-MIP can be used for screening of different tumor cells of various stages, including CLL cells.


Future Science OA | 2015

Interfacing antibody-based microarrays and digital holography enables label-free detection for loss of cell volume

Zahra El-Schich; Emmy Nilsson; Anna Sandström Gerdtsson; Christer Wingren; Anette Gjörloff Wingren

Background: We introduce the combination of digital holographic microscopy (DHM) and antibody microarrays as a powerful tool to measure morphological changes in specifically antibody-captured cells. The aim of the study was to develop DHM for analysis of cell death of etoposide-treated suspension cells. Results/methodology: We demonstrate that the cell number, mean area, thickness and volume were noninvasively measured by using DHM. The cell number was stable over time, but the two cell lines showed changes of cell area and cell irregularity after treatment. The cell volume in etoposide-treated cells was decreased, whereas untreated cells showed stable volume. Conclusion: Our results provide proof of concept for using DHM combined with antibody-based microarray technology for detecting morphological changes in captured cells.

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Anna Mölder

Manchester Metropolitan University

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Helena Tassidis

Kristianstad University College

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Mads Bak

University of Copenhagen

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Niels Tommerup

University of Copenhagen

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