AI Article Synopsis

  • Persistent infection is a major risk factor for gastric cancer, with increased uPAR expression observed in inflamed gastric tissues, though a direct link has not been previously established.
  • In a mouse model of gastritis caused by specific bacterial infection, researchers tracked uPAR protein expression in the gastric lining, noting its levels in both infected and non-infected states.
  • The study found that uPAR expression significantly increases in response to infection, decreases after treatment to eliminate the bacteria, and is influenced by inflammation levels, suggesting that ongoing infection is crucial for increased uPAR expression in gastric cells.

Article Abstract

(1) Background: Persistent infection is the most important risk factor for gastric cancer. The urokinase receptor (uPAR) is upregulated in lesions harboring cancer invasion and inflammation. Circumstantial evidence tends to correlate colonization with increased uPAR expression in the human gastric epithelium, but a direct causative link has not yet been established in vivo; (2) Methods: In a mouse model of -induced gastritis, we investigated the temporal emergence of uPAR protein expression in the gastric mucosa in response to (SS1 strain) infection; (3) Results: We observed intense uPAR immunoreactivity in foveolar epithelial cells of the gastric corpus due to de novo synthesis, compared to non-infected animals. This uPAR induction represents a very early response, but it increases progressively over time as do infiltrating immune cells. Eradication of infection by antimicrobial therapy causes a regression of uPAR expression to its physiological baseline levels. Suppression of the inflammatory response by prostaglandin E treatment attenuates uPAR expression. Notwithstanding this relationship, does induce uPAR expression in vitro in co-cultures with gastric cancer cell lines; (4) Conclusions: We showed that persistent colonization is a necessary event for the emergence of a relatively high uPAR protein expression in murine gastric epithelial cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7409347PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8071019DOI Listing

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