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1.
We have recently shown that adaptation of gastric mucosa to aspirin (ASA) is disturbed in Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori)-infected human stomach, but can be restored by eradication of the bacterium. The aim of this study was 1) to evaluate the influence of H. pylori on expression of heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) during ASA ingestion in these subjects and in mice model and 2) to evaluate, whether altered HSP70 expression might be associated with different adaptation to ASA in H. pylori-positive and eradicated subjects. The gastric mucosal HSP 70 gene expression was determined by quantitative RT-PCR and Western blot and immunohistochemistry during 14 days of ASA ingestion (1 g bid) in the same 8 subjects before and 3 months after successful eradication of H. pylori. In addition, HSP70 mRNA and protein expression were examined in 30 mice without and with H. pylori infection and eradication. During 14 days of ASA treatment, human H. pylori-infected mucosa revealed a decrease of HSP70 expression, while after eradication a higher expression and further increase of HSP70 expression during ASA ingestion were observed. Mice inoculated with H. pylori also exhibited decreased gastric mucosal HSP70 mRNA expression that was restored after eradication therapy. Decreased basal and ASA-induced expression of HSP70 may partly be responsible for impaired gastric adaptation to ASA in H. pylori-positive subjects. We conclude that 1. The HSP70 gene and protein expression is reduced during infection with H. pylori in men and mice and that gastric adaptation to ASA in H. pylori eradicated subjects is accompanied by increased HSP70 expression; 2. It is reasonable to assume that decreased HSP70 expression might contribute to disturbed gastric adaptation in H. pylori infection in humans and 3. The expression of HSP70 plays an important role in the mechanism of gastric adaptation to ASA and that H. pylori infection interferes with this adaptation due to decrease of HSP70 expression in gastric mucosal cells.  相似文献   

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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   

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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   

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Helicobacter pylori colonizes the human gastric epithelium and induces an inflammatory response that is a trigger for gastric carcinogenesis. Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) have recently been shown to be up-regulated in gastric epithelial cells infected with H. pylori and might contribute to the pathogenesis of peptic ulcer. The aim of this study was to extend the knowledge about the effect of H. pylori infection on MMP-1 expression by gastric epithelial cells, the kinetics of induction, the pathogenetic properties of the bacterium, and the intracellular signaling pathways required for MMP-1 up-regulation. Expression of MMP-1 was induced more than 10-fold by co-culture of AGS+cells with H. pylori strains carrying the pathogenicity island (PAI). H. pylori strains with mutations in the PAI and a defective type IV secretion system had no effect on MMP-1. Double immunofluorescence revealed strong MMP-1 staining in epithelial cells of gastric biopsies at sites of bacterial attachment. In vitro, MMP-1 is up-regulated by interleukin-1beta and tumor necrosis factor-alpha, but these regulatory mechanisms are not operating in H. pylori infection as shown by inhibitory antibodies. Specific inhibitors of JNK kinase and ERK1/2 kinase were found to suppress the H. pylori-induced MMP-1 expression and activity. AGS cells treated with antisense MMP-1 showed a significantly reduced potential to degrade reconstituted basement membrane. Our results suggest that in gastric epithelial cells, H. pylori up-regulates MMP-1 in a type IV secretion system-dependent manner via JNK and ERK1/2. Induction of MMP-1 is further implicated in complex processes induced by H. pylori, resulting in tissue degradation and remodeling of the gastric mucosa.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND: Host factors play an important role in the pathophysiology of Helicobacter pylori infection and development of gastritis and related disease. The established opinion is that the T-cell-mediated immune response to H. pylori infection is of Th1 type. Our earlier immune cell phenotype studies indicate a mixed Th1-Th2 profile of the effector cells. Therefore, an extensive adaptive and regulatory cytokine gene expression profile was conducted by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). MATERIALS AND METHODS: Biopsies from gastric mucosa of 91 patients diagnosed as H. pylori negative, H. pylori positive with gastritis, or H. pylori positive with peptic ulcer were obtained by endoscopy. Gene expressions of nine cytokines and CagA status were measured by qPCR. RESULTS: All cytokine genes showed higher expression levels in the presence of H. pylori when compared to H. pylori-negative samples (fold increase: IL8: x 11.2; IL12A: x 2.4; TNF-alpha: x 5.2; IFN-gamma: x 4.3; IL4: x 3.6; IL6: x 14.7; and IL10: x 6.7). Patients infected with CagA-positive strains had higher expression of IL1-beta and IL18 compared to patients infected with CagA-negative strains (x 1.6 for IL1-beta and x 2.0 for IL18). Patients with duodenal ulcer had a lower antral Th1/Th2 ratio than other H. pylori-positive patients. CONCLUSIONS: The cytokine profile of H. pylori-infected gastric mucosa shows a mixed Th1-Th2 profile. Furthermore, a high IL10 expression may indicate that also regulatory T cells play a role in the chronic phase of H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

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The gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori is known to activate epithelial cell signaling pathways that regulate numerous inflammatory response genes. The aim of this study was to elucidate the pathway leading to extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) 1/2 phosphorylation in H. pylori-infected AGS gastric epithelial cells. We find that H. pylori, via activation of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor activates the small GTP-binding protein Ras, which in turn, mediates ERK1/2 phosphorylation. cag+ strains of H. pylori are able to induce greater EGF receptor activation than cag- strains, and studies with isogenic mutants indicate that an intact type IV bacterial secretion system is required for this effect. Blockade of EGF receptor activation using tyrphostin AG1478 prevents H. pylori-mediated Ras activation, inhibits ERK1/2 phosphorylation, and substantially decreases interleukin-8 gene expression and protein production. Investigations into the mechanism of EGF receptor activation, using heparin, a metalloproteinase inhibitor and neutralizing antibodies reveal that H. pylori transactivates the EGF receptor via activation of the endogenous ligand heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor. Transactivation of gastric epithelial cell EGF receptors may be instrumental in regulating both proliferative and inflammatory responses induced by cag+ H. pylori infection.  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   

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BACKGROUND: Helicobacer pylori infection is a major gastric cancer risk factor. Deficient DNA mismatch repair (MMR) caused by H. pylori may underlie microsatellite instability (MSI) in the gastric epithelium and may represent a major mechanism of mutation accumulation in the gastric mucosa during the early stages of H. pylori-associated gastric carcinogenesis. In this study, we examined the expression of DNA MMR protein (hMLH1 and hMSH2) in patients with chronic H. pylori infection before and after eradication of the infection. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Gastric tissue samples were collected from 60 patients with H. pylori gastritis and peptic ulcer disease before and after eradication of the infection. The DNA MMR protein expression (hMLH1 and hMSH2) was determined by immunohistochemical staining in 60 patients before and after H. pylori eradication. The percentage of epithelial cell nuclei and intensity of staining were then compared in gastric biopsies before and after eradication. RESULTS: The percentage of hMLH1 (76.60 +/- 20.27, 84.82 +/- 12.73, p=.01) and hMSH2 (82.36 +/- 12.86, 88.11 +/- 9.27, p<.05) positive epithelial cells significantly increased in 53 patients who became H. pylori-negative after eradication therapy. However, the intensity of hMLH1 and hMSH2 staining was not significantly different. In those 7 patients, who did not respond to the eradication therapy and were still H. pylori-positive, the percent positivity and intensity of hMLH1 and hMSH2 staining did not change. CONCLUSIONS: The expression of DNA MMR proteins increased in the gastric mucosa after H. pylori eradication, indicating that H. pylori gastritis may be associated with a reduced DNA MMR system during infection. The effect of H. pylori infection on MMR protein expression appears to be at least partially reversible after H. pylori eradication. These data suggest that H. pylori gastritis might lead to a deficiency of DNA MMR in gastric epithelium that may increase the risk of mutation accumulation in the gastric mucosa cells during chronic H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

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Helicobacter pylori infection is mainly acquired in childhood, and polymorphisms in the host genes coding for Toll-like receptors (TLRs) may influence the innate and adaptive immune response to the infection, affecting the susceptibility to H. pylori or the disease outcomes. Our aim was to investigate whether TLR4, TLR2, and TLR5 polymorphisms were associated with H. pylori susceptibility and risk for duodenal ulcer in children. Gastric biopsy specimens were obtained at endoscopy for evaluation of H. pylori status, TLR4, TLR2 and TLR5 polymorphisms from 486 children (254 H. pylori-negative and 232 H. pylori-positive: 72 with and 160 without duodenal ulcer). cagA status of H. pylori infection was investigated by PCR. The levels of gastric cytokines were detected by ELISA. H. pylori-positivity or duodenal ulcer were not associated with TLR2, TLR4 or TLR5 polymorphisms. Otherwise, the presence of TLR4 polymorphic allele was associated with infection by cagA-positive strains and with increased gastric levels of interleukin-8 and interleukin-10. TLR4 polymorphism might ultimately contribute to more severe consequences of the infection in adulthood since it was associated with susceptibility to cagA-positive H. pylori infection early in life.  相似文献   

15.
魏晓晴  吕广艳  金海威  崔颖  赵莹 《生物磁学》2011,(21):4033-4035
目的:探讨幽门螺杆菌及其热休克蛋白60(H.pylori—HSP60)感染与胃上皮细胞表面DEC205受体的关系。方法:分别用H.pylori、H.pylori-HSP60及E.coliLPS刺激胃上皮细胞KATOIII,利用免疫荧光染色技术观察KATOIII细胞表面DEC205蛋白的表达变化,再利用RT—PCR技术,观察细胞中DEC205mRNA对上述抗原刺激后的变化。结果:H.pylori、H.pylori—HSP60及E.coliLPS的刺激明显引起细胞表面DEC205蛋白的表达以及细胞内DEC205mRNA的产生。结论:H.pylori感染与胃上皮细胞表面的胞吞受体DEC205有着密切的关系。  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND AND AIMS: In the human stomach expression of TNF-related apoptosis inducing ligand (TRAIL) and its receptors and the modulatory role of Helicobacter pylori are not well described. Therefore, we investigated the effect of H. pylori on the expression of TRAIL, FasL and their receptors (TRAIL-R1-R4, Fas) in gastric epithelial cells and examined their role in apoptosis. MATERIALS AND METHODS: mRNA and protein expression of TRAIL, FasL and their receptors were analyzed in human gastric epithelial cells using RT-PCR, Western blot, and immunohistochemistry. Gastric epithelial cells were incubated with FasL, TRAIL and/or H. pylori, and effects on expression, cell viability and epithelial apoptosis were monitored. Apoptosis was analyzed by histone ELISA, DAPI staining and immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: TRAIL, FasL and their receptor subtypes were expressed in human gastric mucosa, gastric epithelial cell primary cultures and gastric cancer cells. TRAIL, FasL and H. pylori caused a time- and concentration-dependent induction of DNA fragmentation in gastric cancer cells with synergistic effects. In addition, H. pylori caused a selective up-regulation of TRAIL, TRAIL-R1 and Fas mRNA and protein expression in gastric cancer cells. CONCLUSIONS: Next to FasL and Fas, TRAIL and all of its receptor subtypes are expressed in the human stomach and differentially modulated by H. pylori. TRAIL, FasL and H. pylori show complex interaction mediating apoptosis in human gastric epithelial cells. These findings might be important for the understanding of gastric epithelial cell kinetics in patients with H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

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BACKGROUND AND AIM: A group of the proinflammatory and chemotactic cytokines (chemokines) has been considered as an important factor in the pathomechanism of different bacterial diseases, among them the common Helicobacter pylori infection. Experimental results obtained with gastric biopsy samples of H. pylori positive patients, and with H. pylori infected tumor originated gastric cell lines indicated that these cytokines have essential roles in the development and maintenance of the immune response and inflammation of the gastric mucosa during H. pylori infection. Although the mRNA expression was shown in these biopsy samples and cell lines, it is not yet proved that the normal gastric mucosal epithelial cells themselves express these cytokines. The establishment of a gastric surface mucous cell line with non-tumor origin (GSM06), and the usage of Helicobacter felis as a model of the classic H. pylori infection gave us the possibility to check this question. MATERIALS AND METHODS: in this study GSM06 cells were infected with different numbers (10(5), 10(6), 10(7), 10(8), 10(9) bacterium/ml medium) of H. felis for two different time periods (2, 4 h). Cells treated with medium only were used as control. Then the mRNA expression of the following cytokines was measured by RT-PCR method in the GSM06 cells: proinflammatory cytokine IL1-beta, and chemokine RANTES, eotaxin, MCP-1, MIP1-alpha and MIP1-beta. RESULTS: we found that neither mRNA of the investigated cytokines was expressed constitutively, however the GSM06 cells expressed the mRNA of each cytokine during H. felis infection. CONCLUSION: our results prove that normal gastric surface mucous epithelial cells express immunologically active peptides during H. felis infection. We may suppose that the epithelial cells of the gastric mucosa contribute to the immune response and inflammation by expressing proinflammatory (IL1-beta) and chemotactic (RANTES, eotaxin, MCP-1, MIP1-alpha and beta) cytokines during H. pylori infection in human.  相似文献   

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Helicobacter pylori infection stimulates several intracellular signaling pathways and is accompanied by increased gene expression in gastric epithelial cells. High-density cDNA microarray was used to characterize the mRNA expression profile of genes in human gastric cancer cells (MKN45, AGS) cocultured with H. pylori. Coculture with cag pathogenicity island (PAI)-positive H. pylori (wild-type) significantly up-regulated mRNA expression in 8 of 2304 genes tested. In 6 (interleukin-8, I(kappaB)alpha, A20, ERF-1, keratin K7, glutathione peroxidase) of the 8 genes, up-regulation was confirmed by RT-PCR. In coculture with isogenic cagE-negative mutant ((Delta)cagE), which encodes a type IV secretion system with other genes in the cag PAI, no significant up-regulation was found. We further analyzed the role of A20. Transfection of expression vector encoding A20 resulted in an inhibition of H. pylori-mediated NF-kappaB activation, indicating that H. pylori-mediated A20 expression could be a negative regulator of NF-kappaB activation. Taken together, these results indicate the importance of microarray technology as a tool for analyzing the complex interplay between H. pylori and the host.  相似文献   

20.
Background. Helicobacter pylori infection induces autoantibodies that cross-react with human gastric mucosa from infected individuals. Candidates for the antigens responsible for molecular mimicry causing autoreactivity include the heat-shock protein HspB (Hsp60, sometimes called Hsp54) or Lewis x and Lewis y carbohydrate antigens.
Objective. Our goal was to investigate the involvement of HspB (Hsp60) in autoreactivity between H. pylori and gastric biopsy tissue.
Materials and Methods. Immunoelectron microscopy was used to study cross-reactivity among biopsy tissues from a patient with gastritis, gastric ulcer, and duodenal ulcer and his own serum as well as reactivity with serum raised against HspB from H. pylori and monoclonal antibodies against Lewis antigens.
Results. The patient serum reacted with gastric mucosa, and the antibodies involved were predominantly IgG. Antibody raised to H. pylori HspB (Hsp60) reacted only with H. pylori cells but not with gastric mucosal tissue. In contrast, monoclonal antibodies specific for Lewis x and Lewis y antigens reacted with both H. pylori and human gastric epithelial tissue.
Conclusions. Hsp60 (Hsp54) is unlikely to be involved in autoreactivity seen in individuals infected with H. pylori. In contrast, we could not rule out the role of Lewis x and Lewis y carbohydrate antigens, expressed as a component of H. pylori lipopolysaccharides, in molecular mimicry and autoantibody production.  相似文献   

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