Emile van den Akker
The Netherlands
He graduated as a molecular biologist in 1999 (University of Groningen) and obtained his PhD in 2004 at Erasmus University Rotterdam on Epo and SCF signaling in erythropoiesis.
After postdoctoral research in Paris and Bristol on transcriptional regulation and erythroblast differentiation, he became a principal investigator at Sanquin Research through an LSBR fellowship (2014).
His work focuses on producing hematopoietic transplantation and transfusion products from iPSC and HSPC, including establishing an iPSC facility for disease modeling, gene editing, and advanced red blood cell production.
His research supports donor‑independent cellular therapies, novel bioreactor‑based manufacturing methods, and clinical translation toward transfusing cultured RBCs into healthy volunteers as well as novel gene therapy curative modalities for inherited erythroid defects, like SCD or Thalassemia.
08:10 – 10:00
Wednesday Day 3 : May 6th
Scientific Session 4 – Red Cell Storage and Transfusion Biology
CHAIRS : Camille Roussel, Tim Satchwell
08:10 – 08:35 Invited speaker: Pascal Amireault (France)
Storage alters a distinct subpopulation of morphologically-altered RBCs targeted for clearance after transfusion
08:35 – 09:00 Invited speaker: Emile van den Akker (The Netherlands)
Metabolomics Guided Optimization of iPSCDerived HbFRBCs in bioreactors for a Developmentally Matched Transfusion Product
09:00 – 09:15 Syed Qadri (Canada)
Effect of prolonged storage on red blood cell recovery in murine polymicrobial sepsis09:15 – 09:30 Robin van Bruggen (The Netherlands)
Duffy antigen receptor for chemokines (DARC) as novel signalling hub in red blood cells09:30 – 09:45 Sandy Peltier (France)
Proteasome inhibition drives RBC alterations during storage and under post-transfusion-like conditions09:45 – 10:00 Coen Vliegen (The Netherlands)
Investigating subsets of red blood cells and their functional difference