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Helicobacter pylori cag-Pathogenicity island-dependent early immunological response triggers later precancerous gastric changes in Mongolian gerbils. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Infection with Helicobacter pylori that has a functional cag type IV secretion system (cag-T4SS) leads to increased risk of severe gastric diseases due to its ability to inject CagA into gastric cells.
  • Research using Mongolian gerbils showed that those infected with the wild-type strain (B128) experienced early inflammation and severe gastritis, while infections with a mutant strain (B128DeltacagY) failed to cause similar responses.
  • Over time, wild-type infected animals exhibited more serious conditions, such as gastric ulcers and signs of precancerous changes, highlighting how early immune responses can contribute to long-term gastric health issues.

Article Abstract

Infection with Helicobacter pylori, carrying a functional cag type IV secretion system (cag-T4SS) to inject the Cytotoxin associated antigen (CagA) into gastric cells, is associated with an increased risk for severe gastric diseases in humans. Here we studied the pathomechanism of H. pylori and the role of the cag-pathogenicity island (cag-PAI) for the induction of gastric ulcer and precancerous conditions over time (2-64 weeks) using the Mongolian gerbil model. Animals were challenged with H. pylori B128 (WT), or an isogenic B128DeltacagY mutant-strain that produces CagA, but is unable to translocate it into gastric cells. H. pylori colonization density was quantified in antrum and corpus mucosa separately. Paraffin sections were graded for inflammation and histological changes verified by immunohistochemistry. Physiological and inflammatory markers were quantitated by RIA and RT-PCR, respectively. An early cag-T4SS-dependent inflammation of the corpus mucosa (4-8 weeks) occurred only in WT-infected animals, resulting in a severe active and chronic gastritis with a significant increase of proinflammatory cytokines, mucous gland metaplasia, and atrophy of the parietal cells. At late time points only WT-infected animals developed hypochlorhydria and hypergastrinemia in parallel to gastric ulcers, gastritis cystica profunda, and focal dysplasia. The early cag-PAI-dependent immunological response triggers later physiological and histopathological alterations towards gastric malignancies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2650263PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0004754PLOS

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