SummaryGastric mucosa responds to Helicobacter pyloriinduced cell damage by increasing the expression of COX-2 and EGF-related peptides. We sought to investigate the bacterial virulence factor/s and the host cellular pathways involved in the upregulation of COX-2, HB-EGF and amphiregulin in MKN 28 and AGS gastric mucosal cells. H. pylori strain CCUG 17874 was grown in Brucella broth supplemented with 0.2% (2,6-dimethyl)-b b b b -cyclodextrins. The soluble proteins released in the culture medium by the bacterium were fractionated by exclusion size and anion exchange chromatography. A single peak retaining the ability to upregulate COX-2 and HB-EGF mRNA and protein expression was obtained. SDS-PAGE analysis of the peak showed two peptides with an apparent molecular weight of 38 and 22 kDa, which were identified by automated Edman degradation analysis as the N-terminal and C-terminal peptides of H. pylori g g g g -glutamyltranspeptidase respectively. Acivicin, a selective g g g g -glutamyltranspeptidase inhibitor, counteracted H. pylori -induced upregulation of COX-2 and EGF-related peptide mRNA expression. An H. pylori isogenic mutant g g g g -glutamyltranspeptidase-deficient strain did not exert any effect on COX-2, HB-EGF and amphiregulin mRNA expression. Blockade of phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase and p38 kinase, but not MAP kinase kinase, inhibited H. pylori g g g g -glutamyltranspeptidase-induced upregulation of COX-2 and EGFrelated peptide mRNA expression.
Monocytes are circulating precursors of the dendritic cell subset, professional antigen-presenting cells with a unique ability to initiate the innate and adaptive immune response. In this study, we have investigated the effects of wild-type Helicobacter pylori strains and their isogenic mutants with mutations in known bacterial virulence factors on monocytes and monocyte-derived dendritic cells. We show that H. pylori strains induce apoptosis of human monocytes by a mechanism that is dependent on the expression of a functional cag pathogenicity island. This effect requires an intact injection organelle for direct contact between monocytes and the bacteria but also requires a still-unidentified effector that is different from VacA or CagA. The exposure of in vitro-generated monocyte-derived dendritic cells to H. pylori stimulates the release of inflammatory cytokines by a similar mechanism. Of note is that dendritic cells are resistant to H. pylori-induced apoptosis. These phenomena may play a critical role in the evasion of the immune response by H. pylori, contributing to the persistence of the infection.
Beta-thymosins are structurally related, highly conserved acidic polypeptides, originally isolated from calf thymus. We have recently shown that the TB10 gene is overexpressed in human thyroid carcinoma cell lines and tissues, particularly in undifferentiated thyroid carcinomas, but expressed at an undetectable level in normal thyroid cells. The precise role of thymosin beta-10 (TB10) activity in maintaining the malignant phenotype of thyroid cell lines is unknown. To investigate TB10 function and relevance in a model system we used an antisense methodology to suppress TB10 protein synthesis in two human thyroid carcinoma cell lines (NPA and ARO). The growth in soft agar of NPA and ARO cells carrying a TB10 construct in an antisense orientation was significantly reduced. Conversely, anchorage-dependent growth was unchanged in NPA and ARO cells carrying the TB10 construct in a sense orientation or carrying the backbone vector. TB10 expression also affected actin organization. In fact, stress fibers were long and thick in ARO cells in which TB10 expression was suppressed by the antisense construct. Conversely, they were scarce and short in the vector-transfected ARO cells. These data suggest that TB10 plays a critical role in the regulation of anchorage-independent growth and assembly of actin filaments.
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