Publications by authors named "Sidebotham R"

We have determined the molar proportions of the MUC5AC and MUC6 mucus glycoproteins (mucins) in mucus from the normal and pathological human gastric antrum using a least-squares minimization analysis applied to amino acid compositions. We noted that the content of MUC5AC mucin in mucus from individuals without gastroduodenal disease was very high, suggesting that the integrity and barrier properties of the adherent gastric mucus layer are normally maintained by building-block structures formed from this mucin alone. We observed that the molar content of MUC6 mucin doubled (without significance) in mucus from patients with duodenal ulcer, and increased five times (with high significance) in mucus from patients with gastric ulcer, when compared with that in mucus from individuals without gastroduodenal disease.

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To clarify further the role of chemotaxis in Helicobacter pylori colonization, the in vitro bacterium response to human plasma and bile (secretions containing chemoeffector compounds that are present in the gastric mucus layer) was examined. Human plasma, after dilution to 1 % (v/v) with buffer, was found to be a chemoattractant for the motile bacillus. Human gall-bladder bile, after dilution to 2 % (v/v) with buffer, was found to be a chemorepellent, but did not cause the motility of the bacillus to be diminished after prolonged exposure.

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Background: Survival of Helicobacter pylori is dependent upon urease in the cytoplasm and at the bacterial surface. We have sought to clarify how alkaline ammonium salts, released from urea by this enzyme, might alter mucus pH and so affect growth and motility of the bacterium in the gastric mucus environment.

Methods: Experiments were conducted in vitro to determine how the growth and motility of H.

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To explore the relationship between Helicobacter pylori motility, morphology and phase of growth, bacteria were isolated from antral biopsies of patients with duodenal ulcer or non-ulcer dyspepsia, and grown in liquid medium in batch and continuous culture systems. Motilities and morphologies of H. pylori in different phases of growth were examined with a Hobson BackTracker and by transmission electron microscopy.

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Background: Patients with gastroduodenal disease produce gastric mucus of higher viscosity, and mucins that are of a smaller size, than normal. We have modelled these changes to the mucus layer in solutions of methylcellulose, and measured bacterial motility in biopsied mucus, to assess how they might influence the movements of Helicobacter pylori.

Methods: Motilities of Helicobacter pylori were measured in solutions of methylcellulose with molecular mass of 14 and 41 kDa, and in biopsied mucus with a Hobson BacTracker.

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Aim: The effects of the anti-ulcer agents ranitidine bismuth citrate (RBC), ranitidine hydrochloride (R) and colloidal bismuth citrate (BC), on Helicobacter pylori motility, morphology and survival were examined to determine whether the clinical effectiveness of RBC might be linked to a specific action that inhibits bacterial motility.

Methods: H. pylori from patients with duodenal ulcer or non-ulcer dyspepsia were exposed to RBC and BC at bismuth concentrations ranging from 12.

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1. Mucin histochemistry is markedly altered in the stomach in intestinal-type adenocarcinoma. To increase understanding of these changes we have examined the content and distribution of carbohydrate in mucus glycopolypeptides isolated from non-malignant antrum, and from the uninvolved gastric mucosa and tumour site of patients with this disease.

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1. The content and distribution of carbohydrate was examined in mucus glycopolypeptides from human antral mucosae. 2.

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The potential of Helicobacter pylori to degrade gastric mucus was examined. Colonies of H pylori cultured from antral mucosal biopsy specimens of patients with non-autoimmune gastritis were washed with sterile saline, passed through a sterilisation filter, and the filtrate examined for urease, protease, and mucolytic activity. The filtrate failed to hydrolyse bovine serum albumin, or to degrade stable mucus glycoprotein structures of high particle weight that had been separated from human gastric mucus on Sepharose 2B.

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The effect of tripotassium dicitrato bismuthate (De-Nol) on the breakdown of the gastric mucus barrier was investigated by measuring the output of mucus glycoprotein in pentagastrin-stimulated secretion from 13 patients before and after treatment for peptic ulcer, and by examining the accumulation of dialysable peptides and amino acids (DPAA) in stimulated secretion from ten of these patients. The accumulation of DPAA was significantly reduced after De-Nol (by 54%) and to a greater extent than was the output of mucus glycoprotein (by 27%). These observations are consistent with a decrease in the rate of breakdown of the mucus barrier as a result of De-Nol treatment.

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Ammonia, released in the gastric mucosa by the action of Helicobacter pylori urease on transuded plasma urea, curtails the biosynthesis of mucus and/or causes the mucus to be disassembled at the mucosal surface. These changes facilitate colonisation by H pylori and may promote gastric ulcer formation.

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Basal and pentagastrin stimulated gastric secretion was measured in seven patients with duodenal, and six with gastric ulcers before and after four weeks' treatment with colloidal bismuth subcitrate (as De-Nol), one tablet four times a day. Each duodenal and all but one of the gastric ulcers healed. After De-Nol there were no significant changes in basal, or pentagastrin stimulated volume, acid output, or primary parietal component.

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A marked deficiency of alpha-L-fucosidase and the accumulation of fucose-containing glycoasparagines were found in the brains of two English Springer spaniels suffering from a progressive nervous disorder. Both forms of alpha-L-fucosidase in normal brain, which are separable by ion-exchange chromatography, are absent from the affected animals. The storage products were characterized by t.

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Analysis of the neutral urinary oligosaccharides in bovine, feline and human mannosidosis by thin-layer and gel-permeation chromatography has shown that the patterns of stored oligosaccharides in the three species are different. In bovine and feline mannosidosis the most abundant urinary oligosaccharide is also the most abundant in the tissues of each species. The predominant oligosaccharides were purified by a combination of gel-filtration, ion-exchange and thin-layer chromatography and shown to contain only mannose and N-acetylglucosamine by g.

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Dextrans.

Adv Carbohydr Chem Biochem

August 1976

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