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1.
Almost half the world's population is infected by Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori). This bacterium increases the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) in human stomach, and this has been reported to impact upon gastric inflammation and carcinogenesis. However, the precise mechanism by which H. pylori induces gastric carcinogenesis is presently unclear. Although the main source of ROS/RNS production is possibly the host neutrophil, H. pylori itself produces O???. Furthermore, its cytotoxin induces ROS production by gastric epithelial cells, which might affect intracellular signal transduction, resulting in gastric carcinogenesis. Excessive ROS production in gastric epithelial cells can cause DNA damage and thus might be involved in gastric carcinogenesis. Understanding the molecular mechanism of H. pylori-induced carcinogenesis is important for developing new strategies against gastric cancer.  相似文献   

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Infection with Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is a risk factor for the development of gastric cancer. Here we show that infection of gastric epithelial cells with 'cag' pathogenicity island (cagPAI)-positive H. pylori induced aberrant expression of activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID), a member of the cytidine-deaminase family that acts as a DNA- and RNA-editing enzyme, via the IkappaB kinase-dependent nuclear factor-kappaB activation pathway. H. pylori-mediated upregulation of AID resulted in the accumulation of nucleotide alterations in the TP53 tumor suppressor gene in gastric cells in vitro. Our findings provide evidence that aberrant AID expression caused by H. pylori infection might be a mechanism of mutation accumulation in the gastric mucosa during H. pylori-associated gastric carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

4.
D Raju  S Hussey  NL Jones 《Autophagy》2012,8(9):1387-1388
Autophagy plays key roles both in host defense against bacterial infection and in tumor biology. Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection causes chronic gastritis and is the single most important risk factor for the development of gastric cancer in humans. Its vacuolating cytotoxin (VacA) promotes gastric colonization and is associated with more severe disease. Acute exposure to VacA initially triggers host autophagy to mitigate the effects of the toxin in epithelial cells. Recently, we demonstrated that chronic exposure to VacA leads to the formation of defective autophagosomes that lack CTSD/cathepsin D and have reduced catalytic activity. Disrupted autophagy results in accumulation of reactive oxygen species and SQSTM1/p62 both in vitro and in vivo in biopsy samples from patients infected with VacA (+) but not VacA (-) strains. We also determined that the Crohn disease susceptibility polymorphism in the essential autophagy gene ATG16L1 increases susceptibility to H. pylori infection. Furthermore, peripheral blood monocytes from individuals with the ATG16L1 risk variant show impaired autophagic responses to VacA exposure. This is the first study to identify both a host autophagy susceptibility gene for H. pylori infection and to define the mechanism by which the autophagy pathway is affected following H. pylori infection. Collectively, these findings highlight the synergistic effects of host and bacterial autophagy factors on H. pylori pathogenesis and the potential for subsequent cancer susceptibility.  相似文献   

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Reactive oxygen species (ROS) from both endogenous and exogenous sources can cause oxidative DNA damage and dysregulated cell signaling, which are involved in the multistage process of carcinogenesis such as tumor initiation, promotion and progression. A number of structurally different anticarcinogenic agents inhibit inflammation and tumor promotion as they reduce ROS production and oxidative DNA damage. Evidence suggests that porphyrins can interfere with the actions of various carcinogens and mutagens by forming face-to-face complexes and their antimutagenic or antigenotoxic effects may also be attributed to their antioxidant activities. However, little is known regarding the anti-tumor promoting potential and mechanism of the porphyrin compounds. Based on our previous results on the inhibitory effects of chlorophyllin (CHL), hemin and tetrakis(4-benzoic acid)porphyrin (TBAP) against two-stage mouse skin carcinogenesis, we have investigated their anti-tumor promoting mechanisms. In the present work, CHL, hemin and TBAP reduced superoxide anion generation by 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) in differentiated HL-60 cells and the production of hydroxyl radicals by Fenton reaction. Porphyrins exert a dose-related inhibition of his(+) reversion in Salmonella typhimurium TA102 induced by tert-butylhydroperoxide (t-BOOH). DNA strand breaks by ROS derived from H(2)O(2)/Cu(II) and the formation of 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OH-dG) in calf thymus DNA treated with H(2)O(2)/UV also were inhibited markedly by porphyrins in a concentration-dependent manner. Furthermore, CHL, hemin and TBAP decreased myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity and H(2)O(2) formation as well as epidermal ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) activity in mouse skin treated with TPA. These results demonstrate that the antioxidative properties of porphyrins are important for inhibiting TPA-induced tumor promotion.  相似文献   

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Numerous studies initiated by Warren and Marshall in 1982 confirmed the crucial role of H. pylori infection in the pathogenesis of gastritis, peptic ulcer and possibly also gastric cancer leading to reappraisal of fundamental concept of gastric pathophysiology. These topics were covered, in part, by our previous H. pylori-related symposium I (1995), II (1997) and III (1999) organized in Cracow. H. pylori is one of the most frequent causes of gastroduodenal infection worldwide, resulting in the release of various bacterial and host dependent cytotoxic substances including ammonia, platelet activating factor (PAF), cytotoxins and lipopolysaccharides (LPS) as well as cytokines such as interleukins (IL)-1-12, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF(alpha), interferon gamma (INFgamma) and reactive oxygen species (ROS). Recently, several extradigestive pathologies have been linked to H. pylori infection including cardiovascular, cutaneous, autoimmune, esophageal and other diseases such as sideropenic anemia, growth retardation, extragastric MALT-lymphoma etc. The potential role of H. pylori infection in the pathogenesis of these extradigestive disorders has been based on facts that 1) local gastric inflammation may exert systemic effects, 2) chronic infection of gastric mucosa induces immune responses that are able to cause the lesions remote to primary site of infection and 3) H. pylori eradication improves the extradigestive disorders. The aim of present III International Symposium is to provide critical reviews based on personal experience and the available literature about extragastric manifestations of H. pylori infection. The ultimate goal of this symposium is to foster interdisciplinary research and exchange of opinion about the possible involvement of H. pylori in extradigestive pathologies.  相似文献   

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Background:  Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) can play an important role in cellular injury and carcinogenesis of gastric epithelial cells infected with Helicobacter pylori . 8-OH-deoxy guanosine (8-OHdG) and 8-nitroguanine (8-NG) are markers for ROS- and RNS-mediated DNA oxidation, respectively. In this study, RNS-mediated DNA damage in gastric mucosa was observed directly using a newly developed antibody to 8-NG to clarify how H. pylori infection causes nitrative DNA damage to gastric epithelial cells.
Methods:  Immunohistochemistry with anti-8-OHdG and anti-8-NG antibodies was performed on gastric tissue samples from 45 patients (25 men and 20 women) with H. pylori -positive gastritis and 19 patients (11 men and 8 women) exhibiting successful H. pylori eradication. Histologic factors for gastric mucosal inflammation were graded according to the guidelines of the Updated Sydney system.
Results:  In corpus mucosa, 8-OHdG and 8-NG production were significantly associated with the degree of glandular atrophy, infiltration of chronic inflammatory cells and intestinal metaplasia in the glandular epithelial cells. Successful H. pylori eradication resulted in a significant reduction of chronic inflammatory cell infiltration and neutrophilic activity. Mean 8-OHdG production was lower after H. pylori eradication in both corpus and antral mucosa ( p  = .022 and .049, respectively). However, the reduction in 8-NG exhibited was more pronounced than the reduction of 8-OhdG ( p  = .004 and .007, respectively).
Conclusions:  Helicobacter pylori infection can induce inflammatory cells infiltration, which evokes DNA damage of gastric epithelial cells through ROS and RNS production. 8-NG might be a more sensitive biomarker than 8-OHdG for H. pylori -induced DNA damage in gastric mucosa.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Helicobacter pylori infection in Mongolian gerbils is an established experimental model of gastric carcinogenesis that mimics H. pylori-positive patients developing gastric ulcer and gastric cancer, but the effect of probiotic therapy on functional aspects of this infection remains unknown. METHODS: We compared the effects of intragastric inoculation of gerbils with H. pylori strain (cagA+ vacA+, 5 x 10(6) colony forming units/ml) with or without triple therapy including omeprazole, amoxicillin, and tinidazol or probiotic bacteria Lacidofil. Histology of glandular mucosa, the viable H. pylori, and density of H. pylori colonization were evaluated. The gastric blood flow was measured by H2-gas clearance method; the plasma gastrin and gastric luminal somatostatin were determined by RIA and expression of cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 and apoptotic Bax and Bcl-2 proteins were evaluated by Western blot. RESULTS: The gastric H. pylori infection was detected in all animals by histology and H. pylori culture. Basal gastric acid was significantly reduced in H. pylori-infected animals but not in those with triple therapy or Lacidofil. Early lesions were seen already 4 weeks upon H. pylori inoculation and consisted of chronic gastritis and glandular atypia associated with typical regenerative hyperplasia and increased mitotic activity and formation of apoptotic bodies. The H. pylori infection was accompanied by the fall in gastric blood flow, the marked increase in plasma gastrin, the significant fall in gastric somatostatin levels and Bcl-2 protein expression, and the rise in expression of COX-2 and Bax proteins. These mucosal changes were counteracted by the triple therapy and Lacidofil. CONCLUSIONS: H. pylori infection in gerbils, associated with regenerative hyperplasia of glandular structure, results in the suppression of gastric secretion, overexpression of COX-2, and enhancement in apoptosis and impairment of both, gastric blood flow and gastrin-somatostatin link that were reversed by anti-H. pylori triple therapy and attenuated by probiotics.  相似文献   

10.
Helicobacter pylori infection leads to gastroduodenal inflammation, peptic ulceration, and gastric carcinoma. Moreover, H. pylori may induce disease-specific protein expression in gastric epithelial cells. The present study was aimed at determining differentially expressed proteins in H. pylori-infected gastric epithelial AGS cells. AGS cells were treated with H. pylori at a bacterium/cell ratio of 300:1 for 12 h. Altered protein patterns as separated by two-dimensional electrophoresis using pH gradients of 4-7 were conclusively identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) analysis of the peptide digests. Four differentially expressed proteins, whose expression levels were increased by more than two-fold in H. pylori-infected cells, were analyzed. These proteins (14-3-3 protein alpha/beta, cullin homolog 3, alpha-enolase, ezrin) are known to be related to cell proliferation, cell adhesion, and carcinogenesis, and may be mediated by cellular stress, such as reactive oxygen species. In conclusion, the identification of these differentially expressed proteins provide valuable information for the understanding of the pathophysiologic mechanisms of H. pylori-induced gastric diseases, and may be useful as prognostic indices of H. pylori-related gastric disorders.  相似文献   

11.
Park S  Han SU  Lee KM  Park KH  Cho SW  Hahm KB 《Helicobacter》2007,12(1):49-58
BACKGROUND: Arachidonic acid metabolites have been considered as pivotal mediators in Helicobacter pylori-induced inflammatory response, which are mainly metabolized by two distinct enzymes: cyclooxygenase (COX) and lipoxygenase (LOX). While COX has become well known to play a key role in either carcinogenesis or inflammation related to H. pylori infection, little is known regarding the implication of LOX in H. pylori infection. In this study, we evaluated the roles of 5-LOX and its metabolites in H. pylori-induced host responses and further a potential beneficial action of specific LOX inhibitors against H. pylori infection. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Expressions of cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)), COX-2, and 5-LOX after H. pylori infection were evaluated by immunofluorescence staining and Western blotting. Synthesis of LOX metabolites was measured with reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. For analyzing the influence of 5-LOX inhibitors, nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA) and geraniin, on H. pylori-induced inflammatory responses, RNase protection assay and RT-PCR were performed. RESULTS: H. pylori stimulated the translocation of cPLA(2) from cytoplasm to nucleus and increased the biosynthesis of hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids (HETEs) as a predominant form of 5S-HETE in gastric epithelium. NDGA exerted a strong suppression activity of H. pylori-induced 5-LOX signaling. The administration of LOX inhibitors was related with down-expression of proinflammatory mediators such as interleukin-8 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha in both H. pylori-infected gastric epithelial cells and macrophage cells. CONCLUSION: LOX modulation with its specific inhibitors could impose significant anti-inflammatory responses after H. pylori infection, based on the fact that H. pylori infection provoked gastric inflammation through metabolizing arachidonic acid by the 5-LOX pathway.  相似文献   

12.
As H. pylori infection progresses, intestinal metaplasia (IM), a key event in gastric carcinogenesis, develops in the stomach. The mechanism by which H. pylori infection causes the trans-differentiation of gastric cells to intestinal-type cells remains an important question. In the current study, we found that RUNX3 is deregulated in all human IM specimens examined by either down regulation or mislocalization; Aberrant localization of a gastric tumor suppressor RUNX3 is observed in most human cases of IM with concurrent H. pylori infection, and RUNX3 is down-regulated in most cases of IM without H. pylori-infection. The cytoplasmic mislocalization of a RUNX3 was associated with H. pylori-induced c-Src activation and RUNX tyrosine phosphorylation. Moreover, gastric epithelial cells of Runx3(-/-) mice expressed the intestinal markers Muc2 and Li-Cadherin, which suggests that the deregulation of Runx3 is a key event in the intestinalization of the gastric epithelium. Collectively, the results of the current study suggest that RUNX3 deregulation is associated with H. pylori-induced pathogenesis and the development of IM.  相似文献   

13.
Our previous study shows that 6-O-acyl derivatives of L-ascorbic acid inhibits more markedly cell growth of mouse Ehrlich carcinoma than ascorbic acid. The present study shows that 6-O-palmitoyl ascorbic acid but not ascorbic acid prolongs the lifespan of mice into which tumors such as Meth A fibrosarcoma, MM46 mammary carcinoma, Ehrlich carcinoma and sarcoma 180 are implanted. The potentiated cytotoxicity of 6-O-palmitoyl ascorbic acid is not due to an increase in duration time of the cytotoxic action, because 6-O-palmitoyl ascorbic acid is gradually inactivated during contact with tumor cells and exhibits a similar action time curve to that of ascorbic acid as shown by clonal growth assay. Cytotoxicity of 6-O-palmitoyl ascorbic acid is markedly diminished by combined addition of catalase and superoxide dismutase (SOD), as shown by dye exclusion assay, whereas the cytotoxicity was slightly reduced by either enzyme alone but not by the specifically inactivated or heat-denatured enzymes. In contrast, cytotoxicity of ascorbic acid is abolished by catalyse but not SOD. Autooxidation of 6-O-palmitoyl ascorbic acid was not inhibited by catalase plus SOD. The results indicate that cytotoxicity of 6-O-palmitoyl ascorbic acid is attributed at least partly to both hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and superoxide (O2-.) generated at the early stage. Cytotoxicity of 6-O-palmitoyl ascorbic acid is also appreciably attenuated by singlet oxygen (1O2) scavengers such as hydroquinone, 1,4-diazobicyclo-2,2,2-octane or sodium azide, but not by hydroxyl radical scavengers including butylated hydroxytoluene, D-mannitol, benzoic acid and ethanol. Thus, in contrast to cytotoxicity of ascorbic acid mediated entirely by H2O2 initially generated, acylated ascorbic acid produces a diversity of active oxygen species including H2O2, O2-. and other species secondarily generated via disproportion, which may be additively involved in the enhanced cytotoxic action.  相似文献   

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Helicobacter pylori infection is well accepted to be a very important factor for the development of gastric carcinogenesis in the human stomach. In Mongolian gerbils treated with chemical carcinogens, H. pylori infection enhances glandular stomach carcinogenesis, and eradication of infection and results in curtailment of enhancing effects, particularly at early stages of associated inflammation. A high-salt diet exacerbates the effects of H. pylori infection on gastric carcinogenesis, and these two factors act synergistically to promote the development of gastric cancers in this animal model. However, the bacterium exerts the greater effects. Early acquisition significantly increases gastric chemical carcinogenesis in Mongolian gerbils, as compared to later infection. While heterotopic proliferative glands, hyperplastic and dilated glands localized beneath the muscularis mucosae, frequently develop with H. pylori infection alone in this animal model, they obviously regress on eradication, suggesting a relation to severe gastritis, rather than a malignant character. Furthermore, endocrine cells, positive for chromogranin A, are observed in the heterotopic proliferative glands, in contrast to cancerous lesions which lack endocrine elements. In conclusion, H. pylori is not an initiator, but rather a strong promoter of gastric carcinogenesis, whose eradication, together with reduction in salt intake, might effectively prevent gastric cancer development.  相似文献   

16.
H. pylori drug-resistant strains and non-compliance to therapy are the major causes of H. pylori eradication failure. For some bacterial species it has been demonstrated that fatty acids have a growth inhibitory effect. Our main aim was to assess the ability of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) to inhibit H. pylori growth both in vitro and in a mouse model. The effectiveness of standard therapy (ST) in combination with DHA on H. pylori eradication and recurrence prevention success was also investigated. The effects of DHA on H. pylori growth were analyzed in an in vitro dose-response study and n in vivo model. We analized the ability of H. pylori to colonize mice gastric mucosa following DHA, ST or a combination of both treatments. Our data demonstrate that DHA decreases H. pylori growth in vitro in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, DHA inhibits H. pylori gastric colonization in vivo as well as decreases mouse gastric mucosa inflammation. Addition of DHA to ST was also associated with lower H. pylori infection recurrence in the mouse model. In conclusion, DHA is an inhibitor of H. pylori growth and its ability to colonize mouse stomach. DHA treatment is also associated with a lower recurrence of H. pylori infection in combination with ST. These observations pave the way to consider DHA as an adjunct agent in H. pylori eradication treatment.  相似文献   

17.
Considerable knowledge has recently accumulated on the mechanism by which Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) induces chronic gastritis. Although H. pylori is not an invasive bacterium, soluble surface constituents can provoke pepsinogen release from gastric chief cells or trigger local inflammation in the underlying tissue. Urease appears to be one of the prime chemoattractants for recruitment and activation of inflammatory cells. Release of cytokines, such as tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin 1 and 6, and oxygen radicals, leads to a further tissue inflammation accompanied by a potent systemic IgA and IgG type of immune response. Chronic inflammation and antigens on glandular epithelial cells lead to a progressive destruction with loss of the epithelial barrier function. Within the gastric mucosa, patches of intestinal metaplasia develop, which may be a risk factor for subsequent development of gastric carcinoma. Hyperacidity in duodenal ulcer patients induces gastric metaplasia in the duodenal bulb, which represents a target for H. pylori colonization and ulcer formation. H. pylori can be detected in the majority of patients with peptic ulcers and, compared to age-matched healthy people, it is also found more often in patients with dyspepsia and gastric carcinoma. Although H. pylori can be detected in healthy people, the marked reduction of the ulcer recurrence rate by eradication of H. pylori (80 percent versus 20 percent relapse within one year) suggests that H. pylori is a major risk factor for duodenal ulcer formation. The potential role of H. pylori in non-ulcer dyspepsia and carcinogenesis is under investigation. Current regimens aimed at eradicating H. pylori use a combination of several drugs that are potentially toxic. Since the risk of complications may exceed the potential benefit in most patients, eradication treatment should be limited to clinical trials and to patients with aggressive ulcer disease. New drug regimens, e.g., the combination of proton pump inhibitors with one antibiotic, may provide less toxic alternatives. Beyond ulcer treatment, effective and well-tolerated eradication regimens may have a place in prophylaxis of gastric carcinoma.  相似文献   

18.
Helicobacter pylori infection has been associated with gastric carcinogenesis. Gastric epithelial cells proliferative rate is accelerated in H. pylori infected adult patients. Our study was performed to evaluate proliferative cell activity in gastric epithelium in the course of H. pylori infection in the early stage of its natural history. Gastric antral biopsy specimens were obtained from thirteen H. pylori positive and seven negative children. To assess replication rates we used nucleolar organiser regions staining with colloidal silver nitrate technique (AgNOR). The number of AgNORs per nucleus, area of single AgNOR, and the quotient of these two parameters (AgNOR content) were analysed. The mean area of AgNOR was lower in H. pylori positive than in negative children. Conversely, both the mean number of AgNOR per nucleus and AgNOR content were higher in infected than non infected subjects. These results show accelerated proliferation of gastric antral epithelial cells in the course of H. pylori infection in children. Such alteration of cell replication occurring in an initial phase of natural history of long lasting infection provides an explanation for the association between acquisition of H. pylori infection in the first years of life and the development of gastric cancer.  相似文献   

19.
AIM: Helicobacter pylori is known to enhance gastric carcinogenesis induced by chemical carcinogens. We previously demonstrated that infection with H. pylori strain SS1 did not enhance such carcinogenesis in C57BL/6 mice. Whether this result was due to the bacterial strain SS1 or to the experimental host, C57BL/6 mice, should be addressed. Therefore, we examined whether H. pylori strains introduced to the same host (Mongolian gerbils) differed in carcinogenicity. MATERIALS AND METHODS: H. pylori TN2GF4 strain (CagA(+), VacA(+)) and SS1 strain (CagA functionally(-), VacA(-)) were infected to Mongolian gerbils (n = 126). In the first experiment (induction of gastritis), histologic change in gastric mucosa of gerbils infected by H. pylori (TN2GF4, SS1, vehicle) without N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) at 1 month or 6 months was assessed. In the second experiment (experimental carcinogenesis), H. pylori (TN2GF4, SS1, vehicle) was inoculated to the gerbils after administration of MNU for 10 weeks, and the number of cancers and histopathologic changes at week 54 were assessed. RESULTS: In the first experiment, activity and inflammation in the TN2GF4 group were significantly greater than in the SS1 group at 1 month, while no significant difference was noted at 6 months. On the other hand, intestinal metaplasia and atrophy were significantly greater with TN2GF4 than with SS1 at 6 months but not at 1 month. In studies on experimental carcinogenesis, microscopically, 47.8% (11/23), 26% (7/26), and 0% (0/26), of animals had gastric adenocarcinoma in the MNU + TN2GF4 group, MNU + SS1 group, and MNU alone group, respectively. CONCLUSION: Both H. pylori strains, TN2GF4 and SS1, promoted carcinogenesis in Mongolian gerbils. The severity of gastritis and destruction and restoration of gastric mucosa may be related to gastric carcinogenesis. That the SS1 strain significantly accelerated carcinogenesis only in Mongolian gerbils and not in C57BL/6 mice suggests the crucial role of host factors in carcinogenesis by H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

20.
Recently, we demonstrated that cholesterol gallstone-prone C57L/J mice rarely develop gallstones unless they are infected with certain cholelithogenic enterohepatic Helicobacter species. Because the common gastric pathogen H. pylori has been identified in the hepatobiliary tree of cholesterol gallstone patients, we wanted to ascertain if H. pylori is cholelithogenic, by prospectively studying C57L infected mice fed a lithogenic diet. Weanling, Helicobacter spp.-free male C57L mice were either infected with H. pylori SS1 or sham dosed. Mice were then fed a lithogenic diet (1.0% cholesterol, 0.5% cholic acid, and 15% dairy triglycerides) for 8 wk. At 16 wk of age, mice were euthanatized, the biliary phenotype was analyzed microscopically, and tissues were analyzed histopathologically. H. pylori infection did not promote cholesterol monohydrate crystal formation (20% vs. 10%), sandy stone formation (0% for both), or true gallstone formation (20%) compared with uninfected mice fed the lithogenic diet (10%). Additionally, H. pylori failed to stimulate mucin gel accumulation in the gallbladder or alter gallbladder size compared with uninfected animals. H. pylori-infected C57L mice developed moderate to severe gastritis by 12 wk, and the lithogenic diet itself produced lesions in the forestomach, which were exacerbated by the infection. We conclude that H. pylori infection does not play any role in murine cholesterol gallstone formation. Nonetheless, the C57L mouse develops severe lesions of both the glandular and nonglandular stomach in response to H. pylori infection and the lithogenic diet, respectively.  相似文献   

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