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1.
Infiltration of neutrophils and monocytes into the gastric mucosa is a hallmark of chronic gastritis caused by Helicobacter pylori. Certain H. pylori strains nonopsonized stimulate neutrophils to production of reactive oxygen species causing oxidative damage of the gastric epithelium. Here, the contribution of some H. pylori virulence factors, the blood group antigen-binding adhesin BabA, the sialic acid-binding adhesin SabA, the neutrophil-activating protein HP-NAP, and the vacuolating cytotoxin VacA, to the activation of human neutrophils in terms of adherence, phagocytosis, and oxidative burst was investigated. Neutrophils were challenged with wild type bacteria and isogenic mutants lacking BabA, SabA, HP-NAP, or VacA. Mutant and wild type strains lacking SabA had no neutrophil-activating capacity, demonstrating that binding of H. pylori to sialylated neutrophil receptors plays a pivotal initial role in the adherence and phagocytosis of the bacteria and the induction of the oxidative burst. The link between receptor binding and oxidative burst involves a G-protein-linked signaling pathway and downstream activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase as shown by experiments using signal transduction inhibitors. Collectively our data suggest that the sialic acid-binding SabA adhesin is a prerequisite for the nonopsonic activation of human neutrophils and, thus, is a virulence factor important for the pathogenesis of H. pylori infection.  相似文献   

2.
The microaerophilic bacterium Helicobacter pylori is well established for its role in development of different gastric diseases. Bacterial adhesins and corresponding binding sites on the epithelial surface allow H. pylori to colonize the gastric tissue. In this investigation, the adhesion of H. pylori to dot blot arrays of natural glycoproteins and neoglycoproteins was studied. Adhesion was detected by overlay with fluorescence-labeled bacteria on immobilized (neo)glycoproteins. The results confirmed the interaction between the adhesin BabA and the H-1-, Lewis b-, and related fucose-containing antigens. In addition, H. pylori bound to terminal alpha2-3-linked sialic acids as previously described. The use of a sabA mutant and sialidase treatment of glycoconjugate arrays showed that the adherence of H. pylori to laminin is mediated by the sialic acid-binding adhesin, SabA. The adhesion to salivary mucin MUC5B is mainly associated with the BabA adhesin and to a lesser extent with the SabA adhesin. This agrees with reports, that MUC5B carries both fucosylated blood group antigens and alpha2-3-linked sialic acids. The adhesion of H. pylori to fibronectin and lactoferrin persisted in the babA/sabA double mutant. Because binding to these molecules was abolished by denaturation rather than by deglycosylation, it was suggested to depend on the recognition of unknown receptor moieties by an additional unknown bacterial surface component. The results demonstrate that the bacterial overlay method on glycoconjugate arrays is a useful tool for exploration and the characterization of unknown adhesin specificities of H. pylori and other bacteria.  相似文献   

3.
Background:  Helicobacter pylori causes peptic ulcer disease and gastric cancer, and the oral cavity is likely to serve as a reservoir for this pathogen. We investigated the binding of H. pylori to the mucins covering the mucosal surfaces in the niches along the oral to gastric infection route and during gastric disease and modeled the outcome of these interactions.
Materials and Methods:  A panel of seven H. pylori strains with defined binding properties was used to identify binding to human mucins from saliva, gastric juice, cardia, corpus, and antrum of healthy stomachs and of stomachs affected by gastritis at pH 7.4 and 3.0 using a microtiter-based method.
Results:  H. pylori binding to mucins differed substantially with the anatomic site, mucin type, pH, gastritis status, and H. pylori strain all having effect on binding. Mucins from saliva and gastric juice displayed the most diverse binding patterns, involving four modes of H. pylori adhesion and the MUC5B, MUC7, and MUC5AC mucins as well as the salivary agglutinin. Binding occurred via the blood-group antigen-binding adhesin (BabA), the sialic acid-binding adhesin (SabA), a charge/low pH-dependent mechanism, and a novel saliva-binding adhesin. In the healthy gastric mucus layer only BabA and acid/charge affect binding to the mucins, whereas in gastritis, the BabA/Leb-dependent binding to MUC5AC remained, and SabA and low pH binding increased.
Conclusions:  The four H. pylori adhesion modes binding to mucins are likely to play different roles during colonization of the oral to gastric niches and during long-term infection.  相似文献   

4.
Because previous studies have shown that a high molecular mass constituent of cranberry juice inhibited adhesion of Escherichia coli to epithelial cells and coaggregation of oral bacteria, we have examined its effect on the adhesion of Helicobacter pylori to immobilized human mucus and to erythrocytes. We employed three strains of H. pylori all of which bound to the mucus and agglutinated human erythrocytes via a sialic acid-specific adhesin. The results showed that a high molecular mass constituent derived from cranberry juice inhibits the sialic acid-specific adhesion of H. pylori to human gastric mucus and to human erythrocytes.  相似文献   

5.
Streptococcus suis is a common cause of sepsis, meningitis, and other serious infections in young piglets and also causes meningitis in humans. The cell-binding specificity of sialic acid-recognizing strains of Streptococcus suis was investigated. Treatment of human erythrocytes with sialidase or mild periodate abolished hemagglutination. Hemagglutination inhibition experiments with sialyl oligosaccharides indicated that the adhesin preferred the sequence NeuNAc alpha 2-3Gal beta 1-4Glc(NAc). Resialylation of desialylated erythrocytes with Gal beta 1-3(4)GlcNAc alpha 2-3-sialyltransferase induced a strong hemagglutination, whereas no or only weak hemagglutination was obtained with cells resialylated with two other sialyltransferases. Binding of radiolabeled bacteria to blots of erythrocyte membrane proteins revealed binding to the poly-N-acetyllactosamine-containing components Band 3, Band 4.5, and polyglycosyl ceramides and to glycophorin A. The involvement of glycophorin A as a major ligand was excluded by the strong hemagglutination of trypsin-treated erythrocytes and En(a-) erythrocytes defective in glycophorin A. Sensitivity of the hemagglutination toward endo-beta-galactosidase treatment of erythrocytes and inhibition by purified poly-N-acetyllactosaminyl glycopeptides indicated that the adhesin bound to glycans containing the following structure: NeuNAc alpha 2-3Gal beta 1-4GlcNAc beta 1-3Gal beta 1-.  相似文献   

6.
The role of human gastric mucin in mucosal protection against Helicobacter pylori colonization was investigated. H. pylori cells were incubated with purified intact mucin or its acidic fractions and then examined for their inhibitory capacity of H. pylori attachment to erythrocytes. Titration data established that the inhibitory activity of mucin was associated with its acidic component as the fraction enriched in sialic acid and sulfate showed 16-fold higher inhibitory titer than that of the intact mucin. While the inhibitory titer of acidic mucin fraction was not affected by the removal of sialic acid, the desulfation led to a complete loss of its inhibitory activity, thus pointing towards the importance of sulfate ester groups in this process. The results for the first time point towards the involvement of sulfomucins in the protection of gastric mucosa against colonization by H. pylori.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Helicobacter pylori attaches via lectins, carbohydrate binding proteins, to the carbohydrate residues of gastric mucins. Guinea-pigs are a suitable model for a H. pylori infection and thus the carbohydrate composition of normal and H. pylori infected gastric mucosa was investigated by lectin histochemistry. The stomach of all infected animals showed signs of an active chronic gastritis in their mucosa, whereas no inflammation was present in the control animals. The corpus–fundus regions of the controls showed heterogeneous WGA, SNA-I, UEA-I and HPA binding in almost all parts of the gastric glands. While these lectins labelled the superficial mucous cells and chief cells heterogeneously, the staining of the parietal cells was limited to WGA and PHA-L. Mucous neck cells reacted heterogeneously with UEA-I, HPA, WGA and PHA-L. In the antrum, the superficial mucous cells and glands were stained by WGA, UEA-I, HPA, SNA-I or PHA-L. WGA, UEA-I, SNA-I and HPA labelled the surface lining cells strongly. The mucoid glands reacted heterogeneously with WGA, UEA-I, HPA, SNA-I and PHA-L. In both regions, the H. pylori infected animals showed similar lectin binding pattern as the controls. No significant differences in the lectin binding pattern and thus in the carbohydrate composition between normal and H. pylori infected mucosa could be detected, hence H. pylori does not induce any changes in the glycosylation of the mucosa of the guinea-pig. This unaltered glycosylation is of particular relevance for the sialic acid binding lectin SNA-I as H. pylori uses sialic acid binding adhesin for its attachment to the mucosa. As sialic acid binding sites are already expressed in the normal mucosa H. pylori can immediately attach via its sialic acid binding adhesin to the mucosa making the guinea-pig particularly useful as a model organism.This work is dedicated to Professor B. Tillmann on the occasion of his 65th birthday  相似文献   

9.
10.
BACKGROUND: Helicobacter pylori mainly inhabit the mucus layer in the gastric mucosa. However, mechanisms involving H. pylori colonization and proliferation in gastric mucosa are not well established. This study focuses on elucidating the role of gastric mucosal cells on growth of H. pylori. MATERIALS AND METHODS: H. pylori was co-cultured with the murine gastric surface mucosal cells (GSM06), and the growth of H. pylori on the cells was assessed by enumerating the colony-forming units (CFU). The H. pylori growth factor in the culture media conditioned by GSM06 cell was purified by HPLC, and the chemical structure of the growth factor was identified by analyses of (1)H- and (13)C-NMR spectra. RESULTS: A marked increase in the number of CFU of H. pylori was observed in the GSM06 cells. The enhanced H. pylori growth was also observed when indirectly incubated with GSM06 cells through semi-permeable membrane. In addition, culture media conditioned by GSM06 cell stimulated H. pylori growth approximately one thousand-fold. By bioassay-guided purification, the H. pylori growth factor was isolated from the conditioned medium of GSM06 cells and identified as L-lactic acid. The H. pylori growth-enhancing activity under microaerobic condition was well correlated with L-lactic acid concentrations in the conditioned media. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that L-lactic acid secreted by gastric mucosal cells enhances the growth of H. pylori, and this L-lactic acid-dependent growth of H. pylori may be important to the long-term colonization of H. pylori in the stomach.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
Isolation of MUC5AC mucins from the gastric mucosa from two secretor individuals (one from normal mucosa from a patient with gastric cancer and one from a control) showed different abilities to bind and induce the proliferation of the Helicobacter pylori strain J99. Analysis of the released O-linked oligosaccharides by LC-MS from these individuals showed a very heterogeneous mixture of species from the cancer patient containing both neutral and sialylated structures, whereas the normal sample showed dominating neutral blood group H terminating structures as well as neutral structures containing the di-N-acetyllactosamine (lacdiNAc) unit GalNAcβ1-4GlcNAcβ1- on the C-6 branch of the reducing end GalNAc. The linkage configuration of these epitopes were determined using C-4-specific fragmentation for the GalNAcβ1-4GlcNAcβ1- glycosidic linkage, comparison of the MS(3) fragmentation with standards for linkage configuration and N-acetylhexosamine type as well as exoglycosidase treatment. It was also shown that the lacdiNAc epitope is present in both human and porcine gastric mucins, indicating that this is an epitope preserved between species. We hypothesize that the termination on gastric MUC5AC with lacdiNAc is in competition with complex glycosylation such as the Le(b) and H type 1 as well as complex sialylated structures. These are epitopes known to bind the H. pylori BabA and SabA adhesins.  相似文献   

13.
Helicobacter pylori expresses separate binding characteristics depending on growth conditions, as documented by binding to human erythrocyte glycoconjugates. Cells grown in Ham's F12 liquid medium exhibited a selective sialic acid-dependent binding to polyglycosylceramides, PGCs (Miller-Podraza et al. (1996) Glycoconjugate J 13:453–60). There was no binding to traditional sialylated glycoconjugates like shorter-chain gangliosides, glycophorin or fetuin. However, cells grown on Brucella agar bound both to PGCs and other sialylated glycoconjugates. Fetuin was an effective inhibitor of haemagglutination caused by agar-grown cells, but had no or a very weak inhibitory effect on haemagglutination by F12-grown bacteria. PGCs were strong inhibitors in both cases, while asialofetuin was completely ineffective. The results indicate that H. pylori is able to express two separate sialic acid-dependent specificities, one represented by binding to fetuin, as described before, and another represented by a selective binding to PGCs. Abbreviations: PGCs, polyglycosylceramides; TLC, thin-layer chromatography; SDS PAGE, sodium dodecylsulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; BSA, bovine serum albumin; C, chloroform; M, methanol. The carbohydrate and glycosphingolipid nomenclatures are according to recommendations of IUPAC-IUB Commission on Biochemical Nomenclature (Lipids (1977) 12:455–68; J Biol Chem (1982) 257:3347–51 and J Biol Chem (1987) 262:13–18). This revised version was published online in November 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

14.
Genetic diversification of Helicobacter pylori adhesin genes may allow adaptation of adherence properties to facilitate persistence despite host defences. The sabA gene encodes an adhesin that binds sialyl‐Lewis antigens on inflamed gastric tissue. We found variability in the copy number and locus of the sabA gene and the closely related sabB and omp27 genes due to gene conversion among 51 North American paediatric H. pylori strains. We determined that sabB to sabA gene conversion is predominantly the result of intra‐genomic recombination and RecA, RecG and AddA influence the rate at which it occurs. Although all clinical strains had at least one sabA gene copy, sabA and sabB were lost due to gene conversion at similar rates in vitro, suggesting host selection to maintain the sabA gene. sabA gene duplication resulted in increased SabA protein production and increased adherence to sialyl‐Lewis antigens and mouse gastric tissue. In conclusion, gene conversion is a mechanism for H. pylori to regulate sabA expression level and adherence.  相似文献   

15.
Because gastric infection by Helicobacter pylori takes place via the oral route, possible interactions of this bacterium with human salivary proteins could occur. By using modified 1‐ and 2‐D bacterial overlay, binding of H. pylori adhesins BabA and SabA to the whole range of salivary proteins was explored. Bound salivary receptor molecules were identified by MALDI‐MS and by comparison to previously established proteome maps of whole and glandular salivas. By use of adhesin‐deficient mutants, binding of H. pylori to MUC7 and gp‐340 could be linked to the SabA and BabA adhesins, respectively, whereas binding to MUC5B was associated with both adhesins. Binding of H. pylori to the proline‐rich glycoprotein was newly detected and assigned to BabA adhesin whereas the SabA adhesin was found to mediate binding to newly detected receptor molecules, including carbonic anhydrase VI, secretory component, heavy chain of secretory IgA1, parotid secretory protein and zinc‐α2‐glycoprotein. Some of these salivary glycoproteins are known to act as scavenger molecules or are involved in innate immunity whereas others might come to modify the pathogenetic properties of this organism. In general, this 2‐D bacterial overlay technique represents a useful supplement in adhesion studies of bacteria with complex protein mixtures.  相似文献   

16.
The sugar and cell specificities of wheat germ agglutinin have been studied extensively. In particular, it is well established that wheat germ agglutinin will interact with highly sialylated glycoconjugates of the type carried by the erythrocyte glycoprotein, glycophorin (Adair, W.L. and Kornfeld, S. (1974) J. Biol. Chem. 249, 4696-4704). We have found that polylactosamines isolated from adult and fetal erythrocytes can have a high-affinity interaction with immobilized wheat germ agglutinin. In fact, this interaction is much stronger than the sialic acid-dependent interaction. Using flow microfluorimetry in conjunction with various serological and enzymatic pretreatments, we have measured the extent to which polylactosamines contribute to wheat germ agglutinin binding. We have found that most of the neuraminidase-resistant receptors on erythrocytes are polylactosamine in nature. However, this residual binding of wheat germ agglutinin to neuraminidase-treated erythrocytes is of much lower apparent affinity than the sialic acid-dependent interaction. The lower reactivity of polylactosamines at the erythrocyte surface suggests that these large glycans are actually poorly accessible.  相似文献   

17.
The gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori is a major cause of acute chronic gastritis and the development of stomach and duodenal ulcers. Chronic infection furthermore predisposes to the development of gastric cancer. Crucial to H. pylori survival within the hostile environment of the digestive system are the adhesins SabA and BabA; these molecules belong to the same protein family and permit the bacteria to bind tightly to sugar moieties LewisB and sialyl-LewisX, respectively, on the surface of epithelial cells lining the stomach and duodenum. To date, no representative SabA/BabA structure has been determined, hampering the development of strategies to eliminate persistent H. pylori infections that fail to respond to conventional therapy. Here, using x-ray crystallography, we show that the soluble extracellular adhesin domain of SabA shares distant similarity to the tetratricopeptide repeat fold family. The molecule broadly resembles a golf putter in shape, with the head region featuring a large cavity surrounded by loops that vary in sequence between different H. pylori strains. The N-terminal and C-terminal helices protrude at right angles from the head domain and together form a shaft that connects to a predicted outer membrane protein-like β-barrel trans-membrane domain. Using surface plasmon resonance, we were able to detect binding of the SabA adhesin domain to sialyl-LewisX and LewisX but not to LewisA, LewisB, or LewisY. Substitution of the highly conserved glutamine residue 159 in the predicted ligand-binding pocket abrogates the binding of the SabA adhesin domain to sialyl-LewisX and LewisX. Taken together, these data suggest that the adhesin domain of SabA is sufficient in isolation for specific ligand binding.  相似文献   

18.
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is a resident bacterium in the stomach that accounts for 75% cases of gastric cancer. In this review, we comprehensively studied published papers on H. pylori vaccines using Google Scholar and NCBI databases to gather information about vaccines against H. pylori. Considering the pivotal roles of the enzyme urease (in production of NH3 and neutralization of the acidic medium of the stomach), cytotoxin-associated gene A, and vacuolating cytotoxin A proteins in H. pylori infection, they could be the best candidates for the construction of recombinant vaccines. The outer membrane porins (Hop), blood group antigen-binding adhesin (BabA), sialic acid-binding adhesin (SabA), and outer inflammatory protein A, play significant roles in binding of bacterium to human gastric tissues, and because binding is the first step in bacterial fixation and colonization, these antigens also can be considered as suitable candidates for designing vaccines. Likely, other significant bacterial antigens, such as NapA (chemotactic factor for recruitment of human neutrophils and monocytes to the site of infection), duodenal ulcer promoting protein A (to promote duodenal ulcer), and Hsp60 (as a molecular chaperon for activation of urease enzyme), can be used in the construction of subunit vaccines. New vaccines in use currently, such as DNA vaccines and subunit vaccines, can efficiently replace the dead and attenuated vaccines. Nonetheless, the results show that urease enzyme is most used compared with bacterial components in the designing and construction of recombinant vaccines. The BabA and SabA antigens belong to the outer membrane porins family in H. pylori and are required for binding and fixation of the bacterium to the human gastric tissues.  相似文献   

19.
Helicobacter pylori colonizes the mucus niche of the gastric mucosa and is a risk factor for gastritis, ulcers and cancer. The main components of the mucus layer are heavily glycosylated mucins, to which H. pylori can adhere. Mucin glycosylation differs between individuals and changes during disease. Here we have examined the H. pylori response to purified mucins from a range of tumor and normal human gastric tissue samples. Our results demonstrate that mucins from different individuals differ in how they modulate both proliferation and gene expression of H. pylori. The mucin effect on proliferation varied significantly between samples, and ranged from stimulatory to inhibitory, depending on the type of mucins and the ability of the mucins to bind to H. pylori. Tumor-derived mucins and mucins from the surface mucosa had potential to stimulate proliferation, while gland-derived mucins tended to inhibit proliferation and mucins from healthy uninfected individuals showed little effect. Artificial glycoconjugates containing H. pylori ligands also modulated H. pylori proliferation, albeit to a lesser degree than human mucins. Expression of genes important for the pathogenicity of H. pylori (babA, sabA, cagA, flaA and ureA) appeared co-regulated in response to mucins. The addition of mucins to co-cultures of H. pylori and gastric epithelial cells protected the viability of the cells and modulated the cytokine production in a manner that differed between individuals, was partially dependent of adhesion of H. pylori to the gastric cells, but also revealed that other mucin factors in addition to adhesion are important for H. pylori-induced host signaling. The combined data reveal host-specific effects on proliferation, gene expression and virulence of H. pylori due to the gastric mucin environment, demonstrating a dynamic interplay between the bacterium and its host.  相似文献   

20.
Certain strains of Helicobacter pylori have nonopsonic neutrophil-activating capacity. Some H. pylori strains and the neutrophil-activating protein of H.pylori (HPNAP) bind selectively to gangliosides of human neutrophils. To determine if there is a relationship between the neutrophil-activating capacity and the ganglioside-binding ability, a number of H. pylori strains, and HPNAP, were incubated with oligosaccharides, and the effects on the oxidative burst of subsequently challenged neutrophils was measured by chemiluminescence and flow cytometry. Both by chemiluminescence and flow cytometry a reduced response was obtained by incubation of H.pylori with sialic acid-terminated oligosaccharides, whereas lactose had no effect. The reductions obtained with different sialylated oligosaccharides varied to some extent between the H. pylori strains, but in general 3'-sialyllactosamine was the most efficient inhibitor. Challenge of neutrophils with HPNAP gave no response in the chemiluminescence assay, and a delayed moderate response with flow cytometry. Preincubation of the protein with 3'-sialyllactosamine gave a slight reduction of the response, while 3'-sialyllactose had no effect. The current results suggest that the nonopsonic H. pylori-induced activation of neutrophils occurs by lectinophagocytosis, the recognition of sialylated glycoconjugates on the neutrophil cell surface by a bacterial adhesin leads to phagocytosis and an oxidative burst with the production of reactive oxygen metabolites.  相似文献   

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