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Background: Anomalous expression of activation‐induced cytidine deaminase (AID) in Helicobacter pylori‐infected gastric epithelial cells has been postulated as one of the key mechanisms in the development of gastric cancer. AID is overexpressed in the cells through nuclear factor (NF)‐κB activation by H. pylori and hence, inhibition of NF‐κB pathway can downregulate the expression of AID. Curcumin, a spice‐derived polyphenol, is known for its anti‐inflammatory activity via NF‐κB inhibition. Therefore, it was hypothesized that curcumin might suppress AID overexpression via NF‐κB inhibitory activity in H. pylori‐infected gastric epithelial cells. Materials and Methods: MKN‐28 or MKN‐45 cells and H. pylori strain 193C isolated from gastric cancer patient were used for co‐culture experiments. Cells were pretreated with or without nonbactericidal concentrations of curcumin. Apoptosis was determined by DNA fragmentation assay. Enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay was performed to evaluate the anti‐adhesion activity of curcumin. Real‐time polymerase chain reaction was employed to evaluate the expression of AID mRNA. Immunoblot assay was performed for the analysis of AID, NF‐κB, inhibitors of NF‐κB (IκB), and IκB kinase (IKK) complex regulation with or without curcumin. Results: The adhesion of H. pylori to gastric epithelial cells was not inhibited by curcumin pretreatment at nonbactericidal concentrations (≤10 μmol/L). Pretreatment with nonbactericidal concentration of curcumin downregulated the expression of AID induced by H. pylori. Similarly, NF‐κB activation inhibitor (SN‐50) and proteasome inhibitor (MG‐132) also downregulated the mRNA expression of AID. Moreover, curcumin (≤10 μmol/L) has suppressed H. pylori‐induced NF‐κB activation via inhibition of IKK activation and IκB degradation. Conclusion: Nonbactericidal concentrations of curcumin downregulated H. pylori‐induced AID expression in gastric epithelial cells, probably via the inhibition of NF‐κB pathway. Hence, curcumin can be considered as a potential chemopreventive candidate against H. pylori‐related gastric carcinogenesis.  相似文献   

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The type IV secretion system (T4SS) of Helicobacter pylori triggers massive inflammatory responses during gastric infection by mechanisms that are poorly understood. Here we provide evidence for a novel pathway by which the T4SS structural component, CagL, induces secretion of interleukin‐8 (IL‐8) independently of CagA translocation and peptidoglycan‐sensing nucleotide‐binding oligomerization domain 1 (NOD1) signalling. Recombinant CagL was sufficient to trigger IL‐8 secretion, requiring activation of α5β1 integrin and the arginine–glycine–aspartate (RGD) motif in CagL. Mutation of the encoded RGD motif to arginine‐glycine‐alanine (RGA) in the cagL gene of H. pylori abrogated its ability to induce IL‐8. Comparison of IL‐8 induction between H. pylori ΔvirD4 strains bearing wild‐type or mutant cagL indicates that CagL‐dependent IL‐8 induction can occur independently of CagA translocation. In line with this notion, exogenous CagL complemented H. pylori ΔcagL mutant in activating NF‐κB and inducing IL‐8 without restoring CagA translocation. The CagA translocation‐independent, CagL‐dependent IL‐8induction involved host signalling via integrin α5β1, Src kinase, the mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway and NF‐κB but was independent of NOD1. Our findings reveal a novel pathway whereby CagL, via interaction with host integrins, can trigger pro‐inflammatory responses independently of CagA translocation or NOD1 signalling.  相似文献   

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ExoU is an important virulence factor in acute Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections. Here, we unveiled the mechanisms of ExoU‐driven NF‐κB activation by using human airway cells and mice infected with P. aeruginosa strains. Several approaches showed that PAFR was crucially implicated in the activation of the canonical NF‐κB pathway. Confocal microscopy of lungs from infected mice revealed that PAFR‐dependent NF‐κB activation occurred mainly in respiratory epithelial cells, and reduced p65 nuclear translocation was detected in mice PAFR?/? or treated with the PAFR antagonist WEB 2086. Several evidences showed that ExoU‐induced NF‐κB activation regulated PAFR expression. First, ExoU increased p65 occupation of PAFR promoter, as assessed by ChIP. Second, luciferase assays in cultures transfected with different plasmid constructs revealed that ExoU promoted p65 binding to the three κB sites in PAFR promoter. Third, treatment of cell cultures with the NF‐κB inhibitor Bay 11–7082, or transfection with IκBα negative‐dominant, significantly decreased PAFR mRNA. Finally, reduction in PAFR expression was observed in mice treated with Bay 11–7082 or WEB 2086 prior to infection. Together, our data demonstrate that ExoU activates NF‐κB by PAFR signalling, which in turns enhances PAFR expression, highlighting an important mechanism of amplification of response to this P. aeruginosa toxin.  相似文献   

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Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is a common pathogenic bacterium in the stomach that infects almost half of the population worldwide and is closely related to gastric diseases and some extragastric diseases, including iron‐deficiency anemia and idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura. Both the Maastricht IV/Florence consensus report and the Kyoto global consensus report have proposed the eradication of H. pylori to prevent gastric cancer as H.pylori has been shown to be a major cause of gastric carcinogenesis. The interactions between H. pylori and host receptors induce the release of the proinflammatory cytokines by activating proinflammatory signaling pathways such as nuclear factor kappa B (NF‐κB), which plays a central role in inflammation, immune response, and carcinogenesis. Among these receptors, Toll‐like receptors (TLRs) are classical pattern recognition receptors in the recognition of H. pylori and the mediation of the host inflammatory and immune responses to H. pylori. TLR polymorphisms also contribute to the clinical consequences of H. pylori infection. In this review, we focus on the functions of TLRs in the NF‐κB signaling pathway activated by H. pylori, the regulators modulating this response, and the functions of TLR polymorphisms in H.pylori‐related diseases.  相似文献   

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Gastrokine 1 (GKN1) plays an important role in the gastric mucosal defense mechanism and also acts as a functional gastric tumor suppressor. In this study, we examined the effect of GKN1 on the expression of inflammatory mediators, including NF‐κB, COX‐2, and cytokines in GKN1‐transfected AGS cells and shGKN1‐transfected HFE‐145 cells. Lymphocyte migration and cell viability were also analyzed after treatment with GKN1 and inflammatory cytokines in AGS cells by transwell chemotaxis and an MTT assay, respectively. In GKN1‐transfected AGS cells, we observed inactivation and reduced expression of NF‐κB and COX‐2, whereas shGKN1‐transfected HFE‐145 cells showed activation and increased expression of NF‐κB and COX‐2. GKN1 expression induced production of inflammatory cytokines including IL‐8 and ‐17A, but decreased expression of IL‐6 and ‐10. We also found IL‐17A expression in 9 (13.6%) out of 166 gastric cancer tissues and its expression was closely associated with GKN1 expression. GKN1 also acted as a chemoattractant for the migration of Jurkat T cells and peripheral B lymphocytes in the transwell assay. In addition, GKN1 significantly reduced cell viability in both AGS and HFE‐145 cells. These data suggest that the GKN1 gene may inhibit progression of gastric epithelial cells to cancer cells by regulating NF‐κB signaling pathway and cytokine expression. J. Cell. Biochem. 114: 1800–1809, 2013. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

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Chlamydia trachomatis is an obligate intracellular bacterial pathogen of medical importance. C. trachomatis develops inside a membranous vacuole in the cytosol of epithelial cells but manipulates the host cell in numerous ways. One prominent effect of chlamydial infection is the inhibition of apoptosis in the host cell, but molecular aspects of this inhibition are unclear. Tumour necrosis factor (TNF) is a cytokine with important roles in immunity, which is produced by immune cells in chlamydial infection and which can have pro‐apoptotic and non‐apoptotic signalling activity. We here analysed the signalling through TNF in cells infected with C. trachomatis. The pro‐apoptotic signal of TNF involves the activation of caspase‐8 and is controlled by inhibitor of apoptosis proteins. We found that in C. trachomatis‐infected cells, TNF‐induced apoptosis was blocked upstream of caspase‐8 activation even when inhibitor of apoptosis proteins were inhibited or the inhibitor of caspase‐8 activation, cFLIP, was targeted by RNAi. However, when caspase‐8 was directly activated by experimental over‐expression of its upstream adapter Fas‐associated protein with death domain, C. trachomatis was unable to inhibit apoptosis. Non‐apoptotic TNF‐signalling, particularly the activation of NF‐κB, initiates at the plasma membrane, while the activation of caspase‐8 and pro‐apoptotic signalling occur subsequently to internalization of TNF receptor and the formation of a cytosolic signalling complex. In C. trachomatis‐infected cells, NF‐κB activation through TNF was unaffected, while the internalization of the TNF–TNF‐receptor complex was blocked, explaining the lack of caspase‐8 activation. These results identify a dichotomy of TNF signalling in C. trachomatis‐infected cells: Apoptosis is blocked at the internalization of the TNF receptor, but non‐apoptotic signalling through this receptor remains intact, permitting a response to this cytokine at sites of infection.  相似文献   

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