Patients chronically infected with Helicobacter pylori are known to have hypergastrinemia. Previous studies have demonstrated the stimulation of gastrin from isolated G cells by monocytes and cytokines. The aim of this study was to determine if H. pylori can directly stimulate gastrin secretion. The secretion of gastrin from canine G cells in 48-h primary cultures was investigated using either live H. pylori bacteria or various bacterial extracts from three well-characterized strains. Whole bacterial sonic extracts and water-extracted surface proteins, but not PBS extracts, from strains 43579 (CagA+/VacA+), 60190 (CagA+/VacA+), and 60190:v1 (CagA+/VacA-) significantly stimulated gastrin release. Controls demonstrated that gastrin stimulation by the sonic extracts was not due to a direct toxic effect on G cells. We conclude that H. pylori produces a soluble factor(s), which can directly stimulate gastrin release in enriched canine G cell cultures. This stimulatory effect may play an important role in the H. pylori-associated hypergastrinemia and subsequent development of peptic ulcer disease.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpgi.1998.274.6.G992 | DOI Listing |
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