2013
DOI: 10.1128/iai.01271-12
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High Dietary Salt Intake Exacerbates Helicobacter pylori-Induced Gastric Carcinogenesis

Abstract: Persistent colonization of the human stomach with Helicobacter pylori is a risk factor for gastric adenocarcinoma, and H. pyloriinduced carcinogenesis is dependent on the actions of a bacterial oncoprotein known as CagA. Epidemiological studies have shown that high dietary salt intake is also a risk factor for gastric cancer. To investigate the effects of a high-salt diet, we infected Mongolian gerbils with a wild-type (WT) cagA ؉ H. pylori strain or an isogenic cagA mutant strain and maintained the animals on… Show more

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Cited by 181 publications
(193 citation statements)
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“…Indeed, UPEC differs from Helicobacter by the high degree of virulence. 38 And consistent with the influence of the host environment are the results from Gaddy et al 39 showing in gerbils that a high-salt diet led to reverse from induction to repression the effect of H. pylori on hepcidin expression. This observation may also explain our results with UPEC UTI because the kidneys are the exclusive desalting sites with high osmolarity of urine and of the renal medulla counterpart.…”
Section: Renal Inhibition Of Hepcidin By Upecsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…Indeed, UPEC differs from Helicobacter by the high degree of virulence. 38 And consistent with the influence of the host environment are the results from Gaddy et al 39 showing in gerbils that a high-salt diet led to reverse from induction to repression the effect of H. pylori on hepcidin expression. This observation may also explain our results with UPEC UTI because the kidneys are the exclusive desalting sites with high osmolarity of urine and of the renal medulla counterpart.…”
Section: Renal Inhibition Of Hepcidin By Upecsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…To date the emphasis has been largely on bacterial virulence factors, host genetics, and environmental influences, particularly diet. [5][6][7] But with the recent recognition that the stomach is also colonized by other bacteria, another potential determinant of the outcome of H. pylori infection is the composition or structure of bacterial communities in the stomach, either at the time of exposure or over the course of infection (Fig. 1).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Understanding how H. pylori sometimes leads to clinical disease versus asymptomatic infection, or perhaps even mutualism (2), is one of the leading challenges in the field. Emerging evidence suggests the importance of host and bacterial genetics (1), and their interaction (3), as well as dietary (4,5) and other environmental variables, including the gastric microbiota (6). Among the bacterial virulence factors found more commonly in strains isolated from patients with clinical disease, the best studied is the cytotoxin-associated gene pathogenicity island (cagPAI), which encodes a type IV secretion system (T4SS) that is essential for injection of the CagA bacterial oncoprotein (7,8).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%