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1.
Gastritis due to Helicobacter pylori in mice and humans is considered a Th1-mediated disease, but the specific cell subsets and cytokines involved are still not well understood. The goal of this study was to investigate the immunopathogenesis of H. pylori-induced gastritis and delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) in mice. C57BL/6-Prkdc(scid) mice were infected with H. pylori and reconstituted with CD4+, CD4-depleted, CD4+CD45RB(high), or CD4+CD45RB(low) splenocytes from wild-type C57BL/6 mice or with splenocytes from C57BL/6(IFN-gamma-/-) or C57BL/6(IL-10-/-) mice. Four or eight weeks after transfer, DTH to H. pylori Ags was determined by footpad injection; gastritis and bacterial colonization were quantified; and IFN-gamma secretion by splenocytes in response to H. pylori Ag was determined. Gastritis and DTH were present in recipients of unfractionated splenocytes, CD4+ splenocytes, and CD4+CD45RB(high) splenocytes, but absent in the other groups. IFN-gamma secretion in response to H. pylori Ags was correlated with gastritis, although splenocytes from all groups of mice secreted some IFN-gamma. Gastritis was most severe in recipients of splenocytes from IL-10-deficient mice, and least severe in those given IFN-gamma-deficient splenocytes. Bacterial colonization in all groups was inversely correlated with gastritis. These data indicate that 1) CD4+ T cells are both necessary and sufficient for gastritis and DTH due to H. pylori in mice; 2) high expression of CD45RB is a marker for gastritis-inducing CD4+ cells; and 3) IFN-gamma contributes to gastritis and IL-10 suppresses it, but IFN-gamma secretion alone is not sufficient to induce gastritis. The results support the assertion that H. pylori is mediated by a Th1-biased cellular immune response.  相似文献   

2.
CD8(+) T cells can be important effector cells in autoimmune inflammation, generally because they can damage target cells by cytotoxicity. This study shows that activated CD8(+) T cells induce thyroid epithelial cell hyperplasia and proliferation and fibrosis in IFN-γ(-/-) NOD.H-2h4 SCID mice in the absence of CD4(+) T cells. Because CD8(+) T cells induce proliferation rather than cytotoxicity of target cells, these results describe a novel function for CD8(+) T cells in autoimmune disease. In contrast to the ability of purified CD8(+) T cells to induce thyrocyte proliferation, CD4(+) T cells or CD8 T cell-depleted splenocytes induced only mild thyroid lesions in SCID recipients. T cells in both spleens and thyroids highly produce TNF-α. TNF-α promotes proliferation of thyrocytes in vitro, and anti-TNF-α inhibits development of thyroid epithelial cell hyperplasia and proliferation in SCID recipients of IFN-γ(-/-) splenocytes. This suggests that targeting CD8(+) T cells and/or TNF-α may be effective for treating epithelial cell hyperplasia and fibrosis.  相似文献   

3.
Helicobacter pylori is a major human pathogen associated with gastric diseases such as chronic active gastritis, peptic ulcer, and gastric carcinoma. The growth factor progranulin (PGRN) is a secreted glycoprotein that functions as an important regulator of cell growth, migration, and transformation. We aimed to determine the molecular mechanisms by which H. pylori upregulates the expression of PGRN and the relationship between H. pylori infection and production of PGRN in controlling cell proliferation and migration. Levels of PGRN were examined in gastric tissues from patients and in vitro in gastric epithelial cells. Cell proliferation was measured by colony formation assay. Cell migration was monitored by wound healing migration assay. PGRN protein levels were increased in patients with gastritis and gastric cancer tissue. Infection of gastric epithelial cells with H. pylori significantly increased PGRN expression in a time-dependent manner. Blockade of the p38 and MEK1/2 pathway by inhibitor inhibited H. pylori-mediated PGRN upregulation. Activation of p38 and MEK1/2 pathway by H. pylori was also identified. Knockdown of PGRN attenuated the H. pylori-induced proliferative activity and migration of cancer cells. These findings suggest that the upregulation of PGRN in H. pylori-infected gastric epithelial cells may contribute to the carcinogenic process.  相似文献   

4.
Helicobacter pylori is acquired during childhood, but its mode of transmission remains unclear. A genotyped H. pylori isolate (Hp1) that expresses two classes of adhesins was introduced into the stomachs of three types of germ-free FVB/N mice to model factors that may affect spread of H. pylori in humans. Normal mice represented human hosts with normal gastric acid production. Transgenic animals expressing human alpha-1,3/4-fucosyltransferase in their gastric pit cells represented humans with normal acid production and the commonly encountered Lewis(b) histo-blood group receptor for the bacterium's BabA adhesin. tox176 transgenic mice have a genetically engineered ablation of their acid-producing parietal cells and increased proliferation of gastric epithelial lineage progenitors that express sialylated glycan receptors for the bacterium's SabA adhesin. These mice mimic features encountered in humans with H. pylori-associated chronic atrophic gastritis (CAG). Different combinations and numbers of 6-week-old germ-free normal and transgenic mice were housed together. At least one donor mouse per cage was infected with a single gavage of 10(7) colony-forming units of Hp1. All cagemates were sacrificed 8 weeks later. Cultures of gastric and cecal contents, plus quantitative PCR assays of cecal contents harvested from donors and potential recipients, revealed that transmission only occurred between tox176 donors and tox176 recipients, and that the distribution of Hp1 along the gastrointestinal tract was significantly broader in mice without parietal cells (P < 0.001). Transmission between tox176 mice was not attributable to any significant difference in the density of Hp1 colonization of the stomachs of tox176 versus normal donors. Our findings lead to the testable hypothesis that the relative hypochlorhydria of young children, and conditions that promote reduced acid production in infected adults (e.g. CAG), represent risk factors for spread of H. pylori.  相似文献   

5.
6.
A deficiency of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (CD25+ Tregs) in lymphopenic mice can result in the onset of autoimmune gastritis. The gastric H/K ATPase alpha (H/Kalpha) and beta (H/Kbeta) subunits are the immunodominant autoantigens recognized by effector CD4+ T cells in autoimmune gastritis. The mechanism by which CD25+ Tregs suppress autoimmune gastritis in lymphopenic mice is poorly understood. To investigate the antigenic requirements for the genesis and survival of gastritis-protecting CD25+ Tregs, we analyzed mice deficient in H/Kbeta and H/Kalpha, as well as a transgenic mouse line (H/Kbeta-tsA58 Tg line 224) that lacks differentiated gastric epithelial cells. By adoptive transfer of purified T cell populations to athymic mice, we show that the CD25+ Treg population from mice deficient in either one or both of H/Kalpha and H/Kbeta, or from the H/Kbeta-tsA58 Tg line 224 mice, is equally effective in suppressing the ability of polyclonal populations of effector CD4+ T cells to induce autoimmune gastritis. Furthermore, CD25+ Tregs, from either wild-type or H/Kalpha-deficient mice, dramatically reduced the expansion of pathogenic H/Kalpha-specific TCR transgenic T cells and the induction of autoimmune gastritis in athymic recipient mice. Proliferation of H/Kalpha-specific T cells in lymphopenic hosts occurs predominantly in the paragastric lymph node and was dependent on the presence of the cognate H/Kalpha Ag. Collectively, these studies demonstrate that the gastritis-protecting CD25+ Tregs do not depend on the major gastric Ags for their thymic development or their survival in the periphery, and that CD25+ Tregs inhibit the Ag-specific expansion of pathogenic T cells in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
Helicobacter pylori infection is associated with gastritis, ulcers, and gastric cancer. The infection becomes chronic as the host response is unable to clear it. Gastric epithelial cells (GEC) play an important role during the host response, and their expression of class II MHC and costimulatory molecules such as CD80 and CD86 suggests their role in local Ag presentation. Although T cells are recruited to the infected gastric mucosa, they have been reported to be hyporesponsive. In this study, we detected the expression of B7-H1 (programmed death-1 ligand 1), a member of B7 family of proteins associated with T cell inhibition on GEC. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR revealed that B7-H1 expression increased significantly on GEC after H. pylori infection. Western blot analysis showed that B7-H1 expression was induced by various H. pylori strains and was independent of H. pylori virulence factors such as Cag, VacA, and Urease. The functional role of B7-H1 in the cross talk between GEC and T cells was assessed by coculturing GEC or H. pylori-infected GEC with CD4+ T cells isolated from peripheral blood. Using blocking Abs to B7-H1 revealed that B7-H1 was involved in the suppression of T cell proliferation and IL-2 synthesis, and thus suggested a role for B7-H1 on the epithelium as a contributor in the chronicity of H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

8.
To elucidate the pathogenesis of Helicobacter pylori-associated gastritis, we studied immune responses of C57BL/6J wild-type (WT), SCID, and gene deficient (IFN-gamma-/- and IL-4-/-) mice following infection with a pathogenic isolate of H. pylori (SPM326). During early infection in WT mice, mononuclear and polymorphonuclear cells accumulated in the gastric lamina propria, and the numbers of cells in the inflamed mucosa expressing IFN-gamma, but not IL-4, mRNA rose significantly (p < 0.005), consistent with a local Th1 response. Splenic T cells from the same infected WT mice produced high levels of IFN-gamma, no detectable IL-4, and low amounts of IL-10 following in vitro H. pylori urease stimulation, reflecting a systemic Th1 response. Infected C57BL/6J SCID mice did not develop gastric inflammation despite colonization by many bacteria. Infected C57BL/10J and BALB/c mice also did not develop gastric inflammation and displayed a mixed Th1/Th2 splenic cytokine profile. These data imply a major role for the Th1 cytokine IFN-gamma in H. pylori-associated gastric inflammation in C57BL/6J mice. Compared with WT animals, infected IL-4-/- animals had more severe gastritis and higher levels of IFN-gamma production by urease-stimulated splenocytes (p < 0.01), whereas IFN-gamma-/- mice exhibited no gastric inflammation and higher levels of IL-4 production by stimulated splenocytes. These findings establish C57BL/6J mice as an important model for H. pylori infection and demonstrate that up-regulated production of IFN-gamma, in the absence of the opposing effects of IL-4 (and possibly IL-10), plays a pivotal role in promoting H. pylori-induced mucosal inflammation.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Helicobacter pylori infection induces apoptosis and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression in gastric epithelial cells. In this study, we investigated the effects of NF-kappaB activation and iNOS expression on apoptosis in H. pylori-infected gastric epithelial cells. The suppression of NF-kappaB significantly increased caspase-3 activity and apoptosis in H. pylori-infected MKN-45 and Hs746T gastric epithelial cell lines as well as primary gastric epithelial cells. An NF-kappaB signaling pathway via NF-kappaB-inducing kinase and IkappaB kinase-beta activation was found to be involved in the inhibition of apoptosis in H. pylori-infected gastric epithelial cells. In gastric epithelial cells transfected with retrovirus containing IkappaBalpha superrepressor, iNOS mRNA and protein levels were reduced, indicating that H. pylori infection induced the expression of iNOS by activating NF-kappaB. Moreover, a NO donor, S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine (100 microM), decreased caspase-3 activity and apoptosis in NF-kappaB-suppressed cells infected with H. pylori. These results suggest that NF-kappaB activation may play a role in protecting gastric epithelial cells from H. pylori-induced apoptosis by upregulating endogenous iNOS.  相似文献   

11.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Helicobacter pylori infection results in an active, chronic inflammation of the gastric mucosa. Previous studies have highlighted the importance of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in diseases involving mucosal inflammation, prompting us to investigate MMP activity in H. pylori-induced gastritis. METHODS: Gastric biopsies were obtained from H. pylori-infected and uninfected volunteers, and MMP activity was assessed using substrate gel electrophoresis. MMP production was also evaluated by immunohistochemistry and real time-polymerase chain reaction. In parallel, tissue inhibitors of MMPs (TIMP) levels and TIMP-MMP complexes were examined in corresponding tissues using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and Western blotting. Finally, MMP production by gastric macrophages was determined after stimulation with H. pylori. RESULTS: Antral mucosa of H. pylori-infected subjects demonstrated a 19-fold higher MMP-9 activity than that of uninfected individuals. MMP-2 was present at lower levels, but was also increased in H. pylori-infected individuals, while there was no difference in the total levels of TIMP-1 and TIMP-2 between the groups of volunteers. Significant numbers of MMP-9-containing cells were only found in the H. pylori-infected antral mucosa. Tissue-resident macrophages were significantly increased in H. pylori-infected individuals, and double-staining showed MMP-9 colocalized to macrophages. Furthermore, gastric macrophages secreted MMP-9 in response to H. pylori bacteria. A corresponding 10-fold increase of gene expression of MMP-9 was seen in patients infected with H. pylori compared to uninfected individuals. CONCLUSIONS: Helicobacter pylori infection results in a substantial increase in MMP-9 and MMP-2 activity in the gastric mucosa, probably contributed to in large part by tissue-resident macrophages, while no changes were seen in the TIMP levels. The net increase in gastric MMP activity is likely to contribute to tissue damage during H. pylori-associated gastritis.  相似文献   

12.
Chronic infection with the human bacterial pathogen Helicobacter pylori causes gastritis and predisposes carriers to an increased gastric cancer risk. Consequently, H. pylori-specific vaccination is widely viewed as a promising strategy of gastric cancer prevention. H. pylori strains harboring the Cag pathogenicity island (PAI) are associated with particularly unfavorable disease outcomes in humans and experimental rodent models. We show in this study using a C57BL/6 mouse model of Cag-PAI(+) H. pylori infection that the only known protein substrate of the Cag-PAI-encoded type IV secretion system, the cytotoxin-associated gene A (CagA) protein, harbors MHC class II-restricted T cell epitopes. Several distinct nonoverlapping epitopes in CagA's central and C-terminal regions were predicted in silico and could be confirmed experimentally. CagA(+) infection elicits CD4(+) T cell responses in mice, which are strongly enhanced by prior mucosal or parenteral vaccination with recombinant CagA. The adoptive transfer of CagA-specific T cells to T cell-deficient, H. pylori-infected recipients is sufficient to induce the full range of preneoplastic immunopathology. Similarly, immunization with a cholera toxin-adjuvanted, CagA(+) whole-cell sonicate vaccine sensitizes mice to, rather than protects them from, H. pylori-associated gastric cancer precursor lesions. In contrast, H. pylori-specific tolerization by neonatal administration of H. pylori sonicate in conjunction with a CD40L-neutralizing Ab prevents H. pylori-specific, pathogenic T cell responses and gastric immunopathology. We conclude that active tolerization may be superior to vaccination strategies in gastric cancer prevention.  相似文献   

13.
BACKGROUND: Helicobacter pylori infection occurs mostly during childhood, but few studies on this age group have addressed the innate immune and the proliferative response to this infection. Mexico has a high H. pylori prevalence in children, but a low risk of gastric cancer. The aim of this work was to study the cellular responses of the gastric mucosa to this infection in Mexican children. METHODS: Antral and corpus gastric biopsies were obtained from 44 H. pylori-infected children (mean age 12 +/- 3.2 years) and 44 uninfected children (mean age 10 +/- 3 years). Mucosal cellular responses were studied by immunohistochemistry, using anti-Ki67 antibodies for proliferation studies, antihuman tryptase for mast cells, and antihuman CD68 for macrophages. T and B lymphocytes were stained with a commercial integrated system. The intensity of cellular responses was estimated histologically using the software KS300. RESULTS: Epithelium proliferation and infiltration of macrophages and T and B lymphocytes were significantly higher in H. pylori-infected than in uninfected children. A balanced increase of CD4, CD8, and CD20 lymphocytes was observed in infected children. However, activated mast cells were decreased, and infiltration of neutrophil and mononuclear cells was low. Epithelial proliferation was associated with polymorphonuclear infiltration but not with infiltration of macrophages or lymphocytes. Inflammation and proliferation was higher in CagA (+)-infected children. CONCLUSIONS: Mexican children respond to H. pylori infection with a low inflammatory response, a balanced increase of T and B lymphocytes, and a high regenerative activity.  相似文献   

14.
Helicobacter pylori evades host immune defenses and causes chronic gastritis. Immunity against intestinal pathogens is largely mediated by dendritic cells, yet the role of dendritic cells in acute H. pylori infection is largely unknown. We observed the recruitment of dendritic cells to the gastric mucosa of H. pylori-infected mice. Bone marrow-derived dendritic cells from mice responded to live H. pylori by upregulating the expression of proinflammatory cytokine mRNA (i.e., IL-1alpha, IL-1beta, and IL-6). The supernatant from dendritic cells stimulated with H. pylori for 18 h contained twofold higher levels of IL-12p70 than IL-10 and induced the proliferation of syngeneic splenocytes and type 1 T helper cell cytokine release (IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha). These responses were significantly lower compared with those induced by Acinetobacter lwoffi, another gastritis-causing pathogen more susceptible to host defenses. Analysis of whole H. pylori sonicate revealed the presence of a heat-stable factor secreted from H. pylori that specifically inhibited IL-12 but not IL-10 release from dendritic cells activated by A. lwoffi. Our findings suggest that dendritic cells participate in the host immune response against H. pylori and that their suppression by H. pylori may explain why infected hosts fail to prevent bacterial colonization.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Infection with Helicobacter pylori leads to an increase of T cells in the gastric mucosa of children. In contrast to peripheral blood, where monocytes are the most abundant antigen-presenting cells, CD14+ macrophages are very rare in infected gastric mucosa. We postulated that other types of antigen-presenting cells must be present in infected gastric mucosa. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Antral biopsies were obtained from 56 children. The cellular expression of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II molecules, CD1a/b, and CD23, which are involved in antigen presentation were analyzed by immunohistochemistry. In addition, T cells (CD4, CD8, CD25, and gamma/delta-TCR), B cells (anti-IgM), macrophages (CD14) and granulocytes (CD15) were quantified. RESULTS: Twenty-eight children were H. pylori-infected. Thirteen children were healthy, 15 had other gastric pathologies. T cells (p<.0001), B cells (p<.0001), CD23+ (p<.0001), and CD1a/b+ (p<.005) cells were significantly increased in the lamina propria of H. pylori-infected children, whereas macrophages were rare without significant differences among the groups. Within the epithelium, CD8+ T lymphocytes predominated clearly over CD4+ cells. H. pylori-negative children had only few MHC class II-positive cells within the gastric epithelium, whereas MHC class II antigens were strongly expressed on epithelial cells (p<.0001) of all H. pylori-infected children. CONCLUSION: Helicobacter pylori infection leads to an enhanced expression of antigen-presenting molecules together with a parallel rise of T cells in the lamina propria. This may represent an effort of the immune system to optimize local immune responses against H. pylori. We speculate that the epithelium participates in the initiation of a local immune response against H. pylori.  相似文献   

16.
Helicobacter pylori gastritis: a Th1 mediated disease?   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Helicobacter pylori is now considered to be the main cause for most stomach diseases including ulcer, MALT lymphoma, adenocarcinoma and gastritis. The infection with this bacterium is chronic despite a local and systemic immune response towards it. Among the cellular infiltrate that arises during H. pylori-mediated gastritis, there is a considerable frequency of CD4+ Th1 cells producing IFNgamma, but not of Th2 cells producing IL-4. Since IFNgamma may induce binding of H. pylori to gastric epithelial cells followed by apoptosis of these cells, one may speculate that H. pylori-mediated diseases are in part autoimmune diseases initiated by H. pylori-specific Th1 cells infiltrating the gastric mucosa. Recent support for this hypothesis comes from an animal model in which mice are infected with H. pylori and display strongly reduced gastritis in the absence of IFNgamma.  相似文献   

17.
Studies of DNA damage in gastric epithelial cells of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori)-infected patients are conflicting, possibly due to different methods used for scoring DNA damage by Comet assay. Therefore, we compared the sensitivity of visual microscopic analysis (arbitrary units-scores and comets%) and image analysis system (tail moment), in the gastric epithelial cells from the antrum and corpus of 122 H. pylori-infected and 32 non-infected patients. The feasibility of cryopreserved peripheral blood lymphocytes and whole-blood cells for DNA damage biomonitoring was also investigated. In the antrum, the levels of DNA damage were significantly higher in H. pylori-infected patients with gastritis than in non-infected patients with normal mucosa, when evaluated by image analysis system, arbitrary units and comets%. In the corpus, the comets% was not sufficiently sensitive to detect the difference between H. pylori-infected patients with gastritis and non-infected patients with normal mucosa. The image analysis system was sensitive enough to detect differences between non-infected patients and H. pylori-infected patients with mild gastritis and between infected patients with moderate and severe gastritis, in both antrum and corpus, while arbitrary units and comets% were unable to detect these differences. In cryopreserved peripheral blood lymphocytes, the levels of DNA damage (tail moment) were significantly higher in H. pylori-infected patients with moderate and severe gastritis than in non-infected patients. Overall, our results indicate that the image analysis system is more sensitive and adequate to measure the levels of DNA damage in gastric epithelial cells than the other methods assayed.  相似文献   

18.
During Helicobacter pylori infection, T cell response is critical in the development of active gastritis and in protective immunity against infection. We studied gastric inflammation and T cell response in H. pylori-challenged mice following an intraperitoneal immunization, using whole H. pylori lysate (HpAg) in the absence of adjuvants. H. pylori-challenged mice without immunization developed moderate to severe gastric inflammation, and splenocytes from these mice produced Th1 polarizing cytokines in response to HpAg and Con A during the acute infection. On the other hand, immunized-challenged mice (those inoculated with H. pylori following immunization) had little or no gastric inflammation despite persistent H. pylori colonization. Our immunization primed splenocytes to produce IL-2, IFN-gamma, and IL-4 in response to HpAg and Con A before infection. However, these cells became hyporesponsive to both stimulants immediately after live bacterial challenge in terms of the production of these cytokines, especially IL-2 and IFN-gamma. CTLA-4 has been documented to be a negative regulator of IL-2 production and lymphoproliferation that induces peripheral tolerance and functions 24-72 hr after the initiation of T cell activation. Compared with challenged mice, T cells from immunized-challenged mice showed higher levels of CTLA-4 expression at 72 hr after oral challenge. These data suggested that our immunization inhibited the development of H. pylori-associated gastritis and induced T cell hyporesponsiveness to H. pylori infection, which might be mediated by the early induction of CTLA-4 following challenge.  相似文献   

19.
The choice of class II MHC determinants that serve as self-recognition elements for murine CD4+ T cells is thought to be determined by the environment in which T cells mature rather than their genotype. Patients with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) reconstituted with T cell depleted haploidentical parental stem cells provide an excellent model for studying this phenomenon in humans. After engraftment, the T cells that develop in these infants are all of donor origin. We sought to determine whether the successful immune reconstitution observed in two such SCID chimeras involved modification of the MHC restriction of Ag recognition by the genetically donor T cells as they matured to become competent T cells in the infants' microenvironment. A tetanus toxoid (TT)-specific T cell line and TT-specific T cell clones were established from the blood of two reconstituted SCID patients and from their maternal donors. T cell responsiveness was determined by [3H]thymidine incorporation after TT presentation by EBV-transformed B cell lines (EBV-B) from various donors. The TT-specific T cell line from patient 1 proliferated when presented Ag by patient, maternal donor, and paternal APC. A CD4+ donor origin clone that proliferated when presented TT by patient and paternal EBV-B, but not by maternal donor EBV-B, was isolated from each patient. TT recognition by these clones was shown to be restricted by the HLA DR determinant shared by patient and father, but not present in the donor. Four TT-specific clones isolated from maternal donors failed to proliferate when presented TT by the appropriate paternal EBV-B. These studies demonstrate that, in these human SCID bone marrow chimeras, engrafted donor-origin stem cells maturing to competent T cells in the recipient microenvironment are capable of utilizing recipient HLA determinants as restriction elements for Ag recognition. This suggests that human, as well as murine, MHC restriction patterns for Ag recognition by CD4+ T cells are environmentally determined.  相似文献   

20.
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