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1.
BACKGROUND: Helicobacter pylori extrudes protein- and lipopolysaccharide-enriched outer membrane vesicles from its cell surface which have been postulated to act to deliver virulence factors to the host. Lewis antigen expression by lipopolysaccharide of H. pylori cells has been implicated in a number of pathogenic roles. The aim of this study was to further characterize the expression of lipopolysaccharide on the surface of these outer membrane vesicles and, in particular, expression of Lewis antigens and their association with antibody production in the host. MATERIALS AND METHODS: H. pylori strains were examined for outer membrane vesicle production using transmission electron microscopy and Lewis antigen expression probed using immunoelectron microscopy. Sera from patients were analyzed for cross-reacting anti-Lewis antibodies and, subsequently, absorbed using outer membrane vesicle preparations to remove the cross-reacting antibodies. RESULTS: The formation of outer membrane vesicles by H. pylori was observed in both in vitro and in vivo samples. Furthermore, vesicles were produced following culture in either liquid or solid medium by all strains examined. Moreover, we observed the presence of Lewis epitopes on outer membrane vesicles using immunoelectron microscopy and immunoblotting. Circulating anti-Lewis antibodies were found in the sera of gastric cancer patients but not in the sera of H. pylori-negative control subjects. Absorption of patient sera with outer membrane vesicles decreased the levels of anti-Lewis autoantibodies. CONCLUSIONS: Our results demonstrate the ability of H. pylori to generate outer membrane vesicles bearing serologically recognizable Lewis antigens on lipopolysaccharide molecules which may contribute to the chronic immune stimulation of the host. The ability of these vesicles to absorb anti-Lewis autoantibodies indicates that they may, in part, play a role in putative autoimmune aspects of H. pylori pathogenesis.  相似文献   

2.
1. A gingival epithelial cell surface receptor for laminin was isolated from bovine gingival tissue by affinity chromatography on laminin. 2. The protein bound by the affinity matrix from octylglucoside extracts of gingival membrane preparation eluted from the column with the cation-free buffer containing EDTA, and exhibited a mol. wt of 67 kDa. 3. The 67 kDa protein following radioiodination was incorporated into liposomes, which showed a specific affinity towards laminin-coated surfaces, as well as to the tooth cementum. 4. The results provide for the first time evidence for the existence of a gingival cell surface laminin receptor, and indicate that the maintenance of the cemento-epithelial junction involves the interaction between the cementum laminin and its receptor on gingival epithelium.  相似文献   

3.
The gastroduodenal pathogen Helicobacter pylori has been shown to inhibit the interaction between the extracellular matrix protein laminin and its receptor on gastric epithelial cells, potentially contributing to a loss of mucosal integrity. As a 25-kDa outer membrane protein of H. pylori in association with the bacterial lipopolysaccharides (LPS) mediates attachment to laminin, the aim of this study was to determine whether the 25-kDa protein is produced by H. pylori in infected hosts. We examined the immune response to the 25-kDa laminin binding protein in 12 paediatric patients; samples from a H. pylori-negative healthy adult were used as controls. In immunoblotting, antibodies to a 25-kDa protein were found in the serum and saliva of H. pylori-positive individuals only, and using the positive sera and saliva, laminin binding to the 25-kDa protein was inhibited. Thus, the 25-kDa laminin-binding protein is produced by H. pylori in infected hosts.  相似文献   

4.
幽门螺杆菌(Helicobacter pylori)被认为是引起人类胃部疾病的元凶之一。外膜囊泡(Outer Membrane Vesicles,OMVs)是由细菌外膜自发脱落而形成的囊泡状结构,其具有细菌外膜多数成分,包括外膜蛋白、多糖、脂质以及其他蛋白组分。越来越多的研究正在关注外膜囊泡在幽门螺杆菌感染、发生、发展过程中的作用。同时,研究表明幽门螺杆菌外膜囊泡作为疫苗,在防治幽门螺杆菌感染中也展现了良好的应用潜力。因此,本综述总结了目前关于幽门螺杆菌外膜囊泡组成成分的研究,并讨论了外膜囊泡在幽门螺杆菌存活和致病机制中的作用,以及外膜囊泡在幽门螺杆菌感染治疗中发挥的作用。  相似文献   

5.
Adherence of Helicobacter pylori to inflamed gastric mucosa is dependent on the sialic acid-binding adhesin (SabA) and cognate sialylated/fucosylated glycans on the host cell surface. By in situ hybridization, H. pylori bacteria were observed in close association with erythrocytes in capillaries and post-capillary venules of the lamina propria of gastric mucosa in both infected humans and Rhesus monkeys. In vivo adherence of H. pylori to erythrocytes may require molecular mechanisms similar to the sialic acid-dependent in vitro agglutination of erythrocytes (i.e., sialic acid-dependent hemagglutination). In this context, the SabA adhesin was identified as the sialic acid-dependent hemagglutinin based on sialidase-sensitive hemagglutination, binding assays with sialylated glycoconjugates, and analysis of a series of isogenic sabA deletion mutants. The topographic presentation of binding sites for SabA on the erythrocyte membrane was mapped to gangliosides with extended core chains. However, receptor mapping revealed that the NeuAcalpha2-3Gal-disaccharide constitutes the minimal sialylated binding epitope required for SabA binding. Furthermore, clinical isolates demonstrated polymorphism in sialyl binding and complementation analysis of sabA mutants demonstrated that polymorphism in sialyl binding is an inherent property of the SabA protein itself. Gastric inflammation is associated with periodic changes in the composition of mucosal sialylation patterns. We suggest that dynamic adaptation in sialyl-binding properties during persistent infection specializes H. pylori both for individual variation in mucosal glycosylation and tropism for local areas of inflamed and/or dysplastic tissue.  相似文献   

6.
The cell envelope of Helicobacter pylori contains lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the O-chain of which expresses type 2 Lex and Ley blood group antigens, which mimic human gastric mucosal cell-surface glycoconjugates and may contribute to the survival of H. pylori in gastric mucosa. Here we describe the generation of monoclonal antibodies specific for Lex and Ley blood group determinants and the characterization of their binding properties using purified, structurally defined H. pylori LPS, synthetic glycoconjugates, and H. pylori cells. Analysis of oligosaccharide binding by SPR provided a rapid and reliable means for characterization of antibody affinities. One of the antibodies, anti-Lex, was of IgG3 subclass and had superior binding characteristics as compared with the commercially available anti-Lex IgM. These antibodies could have potential in the immunodiagnosis of certain types of cancer, in serotyping of H. pylori isolates, and in structure-function studies.  相似文献   

7.
The key protein in the initiation of Helicobacter pylori chromosome replication, DnaA, has been characterized. The amount of the DnaA protein was estimated to be approximately 3000 molecules per single cell; a large part of the protein was found in the inner membrane. The H.pylori DnaA protein has been analysed using in vitro (gel retardation assay and surface plasmon resonance (SPR)) as well as in silico (comparative computer modeling) studies. DnaA binds a single DnaA box as a monomer, while binding to the fragment containing several DnaA box motifs, the oriC region, leads to the formation of high molecular mass nucleoprotein complexes. In comparison with the Escherichia coli DnaA, the H.pylori DnaA protein exhibits lower DNA-binding specificity; however, it prefers oriC over non-box DNA fragments. As determined by gel retardation techniques, the H.pylori DnaA binds with a moderate level of affinity to its origin of replication (4nM). Comparative computer modelling showed that there are nine residues within the binding domain which are possible determinants of the reduced H.pylori DnaA specificity. Of these, the most interesting is probably the triad PTL; all three residues show significant divergence from the consensus, and Thr398 is the most divergent residue of all.  相似文献   

8.
9.
Helicobacter pylori NCTC11637 expresses a lipopolysaccharide (LPS) that comprises an O antigen side-chain with structural homology to the human blood group antigen Lewis X (Le(x)). The role of this molecule in adhesion of H. pylori to gastric epithelial cells was investigated. Mutants expressing truncated LPS structures were generated through insertional mutagenesis of rfbM and galE; genes encode GDP mannose pyrophosphorylase and galactose epimerase respectively. Compositional and structural analysis revealed that the galE mutant expressed a rough LPS that lacked an O antigen side-chain. In contrast, an O antigen side-chain was still synthesized by the rfbM mutant, but it lacked fucose and no longer reacted with anti-Le(x) monoclonal antibodies (Mabs). The ability of these mutants to bind to paraffin-embedded sections from the antrum region of a human stomach was assessed. Adhesion of the wild type was characterized by tropic binding to the apical surface of mucosal epithelial cells and cells lining gastric pits. In contrast, both the rfbM and galE mutants failed to demonstrate tropic binding and adhered to the tissue surface in a haphazard manner. These results indicate that LPS and, more specifically, Le(x) structures in the O antigen side-chain play an important role in targeting H. pylori to specific cell lineages within the gastric mucosa. The role of Le(x) in this interaction was confirmed by the tropic binding of synthetic Le(x), conjugated to latex beads, to gastric tissue. The observed pattern of adhesion was indistinguishable from that of wild-type H. pylori.  相似文献   

10.
Video-enhanced microscopy was used to examine the interaction of elastin- or laminin-coated gold particles with elastin binding proteins on the surface of live cells. By visualizing the binding events in real time, it was possible to determine the specificity and avidity of ligand binding as well as to analyze the motion of the receptor-ligand complex in the plane of the plasma membrane. Although it was difficult to interpret the rates of binding and release rigorously because of the possibility for multiple interactions between particles and the cell surface, relative changes in binding have revealed important aspects of the regulation of affinity of ligand-receptor interaction in situ. Both elastin and laminin were found to compete for binding to the cell surface and lactose dramatically decreased the affinity of the receptor(s) for both elastin and laminin. These findings were supported by in vitro studies of the detergent-solubilized receptor. Further, immobilization of the ligand-receptor complexes through binding to the cytoskeleton dramatically decreased the ability of bound particles to leave the receptor. The changes in the kinetics of ligand-coated gold binding to living cells suggest that both laminin and elastin binding is inhibited by lactose and that attachment of receptor to the cytoskeleton increases its affinity for the ligand.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND: The colonization of the gastric mucosa with Helicobacter pylori is accompanied by elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin-1 (IL-1), IL-6, and IL-8. The aim of our study was to determine the mechanisms of IL-6 stimulation in phagocytes upon H. pylori infection. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We investigated the secretion of IL-6 by different professional phagocytes from murine and human origin, including granulocyte- and monocyte-like cells and macrophages derived from human peripheral blood monocytes (PBMCs). The influence of viability, phagocytosis, and the impact of different subcellular fractions of H. pylori bacteria were evaluated. RESULTS: IL-6 levels induced by H. pylori were low in cell lines derived from murine and human monocytes and in human granulocyte-like cells. By contrast, macrophages derived from human PBMCs were highly responsive to both H. pylori and Escherichia coli. IL-6 induction was blocked by inhibition of actin-dependent processes prior to infection with H. pylori, but not with E. coli or E. coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Using cell fractionation, the most activity was found in the H. pylori membrane. H. pylori LPS exhibited a 10(3)- to 10(4)-fold lower biologic activity than E. coli LPS, suggesting a minor role for toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)-mediated signalling from the exterior. CONCLUSIONS: From these data, we conclude that macrophages may be a major source of IL-6 in the gastric mucosa upon H. pylori infection. The IL-6 induction by H. pylori in these cells is a multifactorial process, which requires the uptake and presumably degradation of H. pylori bacteria.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND: The gastric mucosal protective barrier consists of two essential elements: mucus glycoprotein, mucin, secreted by gastric mucosal cells, and the mucin binding protein (MBP), an integral component of the apical epithelial membrane. The studies described here provide evidence on the structure of MBP, its interaction with mucin, and the susceptibility to phospholipase C (PLC) and Helicobacter pylori protease. MATERIAL AND METHODS: The rat gastric mucosa was used to isolate mucin and the apical epithelial membranes. A buffered saline extract of the mucosal cells was used for the isolation of mucin and the 1% Triton X-100-insoluble gastric apical membranes for the preparation of MBP. RESULTS: The studies on MBP, the mucosal mucin receptor revealed that the protein is anchored in apical membrane through glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI). The deamination of MBP with nitrous acid afforded phosphatidylinositols (PIs) and a water soluble, 97 kDa glycosylated protein. The in situ studies with untreated rat gastric mucosa and the mucosa depleted of mucin showed that MBP without mucin was susceptible to the proteolytic degradation with pepsin and H. pylori proteases, but was not released from the apical membrane by the treatment with bacterial PLC. CONCLUSION: The study of carbohydrate ligands for MBP revealed binding of octa- and decasaccharides of gastric mucin. The severe impairment in mucin adhesion to MBP, induced by the diet containing ethanol, supports the conclusion that specific carbohydrate determinants participate in mucin attachment to MBP and epigenetic control of the processes that coordinates its interaction with apical mucosal epithelium in the formation of innate protective barrier.  相似文献   

13.
CD74, or the class II MHC-associated invariant chain, is best known for the regulation of Ag presentation. However, recent studies have suggested other important roles for this protein in inflammation and cancer studies. We have shown that CD74 is expressed on the surface of gastric cells, and Helicobacter pylori can use this receptor as a point of attachment to gastric epithelial cells, which lead to IL-8 production. This study investigates the ability of H. pylori to up-regulate one of its receptors in vivo and with a variety of gastric epithelial cell lines during infection with H. pylori. CD74 expression was increased dramatically on gastric biopsies from H. pylori-positive patients and gastric cell lines exposed to the bacteria. Gastric cells exposed to H. pylori-conditioned medium revealed that the host cell response was responsible for the up-regulation of CD74. IL-8 was found to up-regulate CD74 cell surface expression because blocking IL-8Rs or neutralizing IL-8 with Abs counteracted the increased expression of CD74 observed during infection with H. pylori. These studies demonstrate how H. pylori up-regulates one of its own receptors via an autocrine mechanism involving one of the products induced from host cells.  相似文献   

14.
B Peck  M Ortkamp  K D Diehl  E Hundt    B Knapp 《Nucleic acids research》1999,27(16):3325-3333
From a sarkosyl-insoluble outer membrane fraction prepared from the Helicobacter pylori strain ATCC 43504, 19 proteins could be sequenced N-terminally by Edman degradation. Oligonucleotides were deduced and used for screening of a genomic library. From the isolated genes, five code for different members of a H.pylori outer membrane protein (Hop) family. Among these, the hopZ gene was characterized in more detail. It encodes a protein which was shown to be located at the bacterial surface by immunofluorescence studies. Sequence analysis of the hopZ gene from 15 different H.pylori strains revealed the existence of two alleles and the possible regulation of hopZ expression by slipped-strand mispairing within a CT dinucleotide repeat motif located in the signal-peptide coding region. Among the different strains, the influence of this region on the expression of HopZ was analyzed on a translational level by western blot analysis of bacterial extracts and immunofluorescence studies on intact cells. The protein is expressed only in those strains in which the number of the CT dinucleotide repeats allow for an open reading frame encoding the complete protein. Addionally the function of HopZ was investigated in an adhesion assay. The wild-type strain ATCC 43504 adhered to human gastric epithel cells whereas a knockout mutant strain showed significantly reduced binding to the cells.  相似文献   

15.
Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) inducing protein (Tipalpha) is a carcinogenic factor secreted from Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), mediated through both enhanced expression of TNF-alpha and chemokine genes and activation of nuclear factor-kappaB. Since Tipalpha enters gastric cancer cells, the Tipalpha binding molecules in the cells should be investigated. The direct DNA-binding activity of Tipalpha was observed by pull down assay using single- and double-stranded genomic DNA cellulose. The surface plasmon resonance assay, indicating an association between Tipalpha and DNA, revealed that the affinity of Tipalpha for (dGdC)10 is 2400 times stronger than that of del-Tipalpha, an inactive Tipalpha. This suggests a strong correlation between DNA-binding activity and carcinogenic activity of Tipalpha. And the DNA-binding activity of Tipalpha was first demonstrated with a molecule secreted from H. pylori.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract Helicobacter pylori colonises the gastric mucosa of humans and causes both antral gastritis and duodenal ulcer disease. Exactly how H. pylori causes disease is not known but several pathogenic determinants have been proposed for the organism. These include adhesins, cytotoxins and a range of different enzymes including urease, catalase and superoxide dismutase. Surface molecules of H. pylori such as flagella, lipopolysaccharide, the urease enzyme and outer membrane proteins are putative adhesin molecules. While phosphatidylethanolamine and the Lewisb blood group antigen have been proposed as receptor molecules for the organism the exact mechanism by which H. pylori adheres to the gastric mucosa has still to be identified. Characterisation of the adhesins of H. pylori could lead to the development of adhesin analogues for use in the inhibition of colonisation and improved therapy for ulcer disease. In vivo studies with isogenic mutants which are incapable of adhering to the gastric mucosa would greatly clarify the significance of adherence. Such mutants could possibly be useful as a vaccine against infection with wild-type organisms.  相似文献   

17.
Helicobacter pylori causes gastritis and some infections result in peptic ulceration, gastric adenocarcinoma or gastric lymphoma. A critical step in the pathogenesis of these diseases is the ability of H. pylori to adhere to gastric epithelial cells. A role for the lipopolysaccharide O-antigen side-chain in this process has previously been identified. In this study, evidence is presented that the receptor recognized by the O-antigen side-chain is galectin-3, a beta-galactoside-binding lectin. A variety of functions have been ascribed to galectin-3 including modulation of extracellular adhesion and chemotaxis of monocytes and neutrophils. Expression of galectin-3 is upregulated by gastric epithelial cells following adhesion of H. pylori, suggesting that in addition to colonization this protein also plays a role in the host response to infection. Upregulation of galectin-3 is inhibited by treating gastric epithelial cells with the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) inhibitors U0126 or PD098059 and does not occur in cells infected with either H. pylori cagE or cagA isogenic mutants. This implies that H. pylori-mediated expression of galectin-3 is dependent on delivery of CagA into the host cell cytosol and the subsequent stimulation of MAPK signalling. A further consequence of H. pylori adhesion is that it elicits a rapid release of galectin-3 from infected cells. A role for this phenomenon in initiating the trafficking of phagocytic cells to the site of infection is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
19.
BACKGROUND: Helicobacter pylori is found within the gastric surface mucous gel layer and in the epithelial surface. Gastric cancer cells have been used in experimental H. pylori infection in vitro, although cancer cells have some abnormalities in cellular properties. The aim of this study was to develop an in vitro H. pylori infection model using normal gastric surface cells that produce gastric mucin. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Normal murine gastric surface mucous cells (GSM06) were cultured by the liquid interface method using a serum-free medium and a collagen gel containing a fibroblast cell line (L929) and infected with H. pylori. Infection by H. pylori was assessed by enumerating the colony-forming units (CFU) of H. pylori adhered to GSM06 cells and by transmission electron microscopy. The production of mucin was determined by a lectin binding assay, sugar analysis, and MUC5AC gene expression. RESULTS: GSM06 cells cultured under these conditions produced mucin containing N-acetylgalactosamine and MUC5AC as the core protein. Significantly higher numbers of H. pylori adhered to GSM06 cells under mucin-producing conditions than under nonproducing conditions. Microscopic observation showed a filamentous structure resembling a type IV secretion system apparatus formed between the surface of GSM06 cells and H. pylori. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates a novel in vitro H. pylori infection model using mucin-producing murine GSM06 cells for early stages of infection.  相似文献   

20.
Role of type IV secretion in Helicobacter pylori pathogenesis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Helicobacter pylori is a highly successful human-specific gastric pathogen that colonizes more than half the world's population. Infection with this bacterium can induce gastric pathologies ranging from chronic gastritis to peptic ulcers and even cancer. Virulent H. pylori isolates harbour the cag (cytotoxin-associated genes) pathogenicity island, a 40 kb stretch of DNA that encodes components of a type IV secretion system (T4SS). This T4SS forms a pilus for the injection of virulence factors into host target cells such as the CagA oncoprotein. This is accomplished by a specialized adhesin of the pilus surface, the CagL protein, which binds to and activates host cell integrins for subsequent delivery of CagA across the host cell membrane. Injected CagA becomes tyrosine-phosphorylated by Src and Abl family kinases and mimics a host cell protein in binding and activation of multiple signalling factors. Here we review the recent advances in the characterization of phosphorylation-dependent and phosphorylation-independent signalling activities of CagA and the T4SS which include the induction of membrane dynamics, actin cytoskeletal rearrangements and the disruption of cell-to-cell junctions as well as proliferative, pro-inflammatory and anti-apoptotic nuclear responses. The contribution of these signalling cascades to H. pylori pathogenesis is discussed.  相似文献   

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