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1.
We investigated the effect of ethanol (a representative necrotizing agent) on gastritis induced by Helicobacter pylori infection in Mongolian gerbils. Seventy-eight gerbils were used. Four and 12 weeks after H. pylori inoculation, 30% ethanol was administered into the stomach. The stomachs were removed after 30 min, the intramucosal prostaglandin (PG) E2 concentration was measured, and histopathology was recorded. H. pylori infection caused chronic active gastritis, gastric erosion, hypersecretion of mucin from gland mucus cells, and a rise in the activity of intramucosal PGE2. After ethanol administration, gastric erosion was significantly less in animals infected with H. pylori than in uninfected animals. In conclusion, in the early stage of H. pylori infection, accentuation of intramucosal PGE2 and hypersecretion of mucin from gland mucus cells have a protective effect against gastric mucosal injury induced by necrotizing agents.  相似文献   

2.

Background  

Helicobacter pylori is the main risk factor for the development of non-cardia gastric cancer. Increased proliferation of the gastric mucosa is a feature of H. pylori infection. Mucosal interkeukin-1β production is increased in H. pylori infection and IL-1β genotypes associated with increased pro-inflammatory activity are risk factors for the development of gastric cancer. The effect of IL-1β on gastric epithelial cell proliferation has been examined in this study.  相似文献   

3.
Helicobacter pylori infection is associated with chronic infiltration by various cell types, including T cells, whose cytokine production may regulate the inflammatory reaction as well as local immune response to the bacterium. We prospectively analyzed the constituents of the cellular infiltrates and the cytokines produced by T cells in antral biopsies obtained from 73 subjects with and without H. pylori infection, before and after eradication therapy, and compared them with a histological grade of gastritis. We found that T cells predominated in cell number, followed by granulocytes/monocytes and plasma cells in both H. pylori-infected and H. pylori-uninfected subjects. Despite the absence of H. pylori infection, more than 70% of gastric CD4-positive T cells obtained from uninfected tissue produced interferon-γ (IFN-γ) in the cytosol. Upon receptor cross-linking of a CD3 and a CD28 molecule, T cells in both infected and uninfected tissue continuously secreted a far greater amount of IFN-γ than those in peripheral blood mononuclear cell controls for a period of cell culture, whereas the increase in interleukin-4 (IL-4) was very small, and no increase in IL-2 secretion was seen. In H. pylori-infected patients, IFN-γ secretion was correlated with the grade of mononuclear cell infiltration and decreased to an uninfected control level after eradication therapy. We did not see the effect of eradication on IL-4 secretion. Anti-H. pylori antibody of the IgG2 subclass was remarkably increased in H. pylori-infected subjects. These results together suggest that gastric T cells are already differentiated to produce a large amount of IFN-γ by a mechanism unrelated to H. pylori infection. H. pylori infection appeared to activate T cells to secrete even more IFN-γ, which may contribute to maintaining a perpetual inflammation in H. pylori-infected stomach. Received: January 15, 1999 / Accepted: May 28, 1999  相似文献   

4.
Background. In recent studies, the involvement of mast cells in the pathogenesis of Helicobacter pylori infection was suggested. In the present study, using isolated canine gastric mucosal mast cells, we undertook to elucidate the effects of interleukin-8 (IL-8) and H. pylori on histamine release from these cells. Methods. Enriched canine gastric mucosal mast cells (50% target cells) were incubated in Hanks medium with IL-8, or water extract or sonicate of H. pylori for 15 min at 37°C. The content of histamine in the supernatants and the cell pellets after centrifugation was assayed with a histamine radioimmunoassay (RIA) kit. Results. IL-8 (50 ng/ml) and concanavalin A (20 μg/ml) significantly increased histamine release from enriched gastric mucosal mast cells. Dose-dependent stimulation of histamine release by IL-8 (5–50 ng/ml) was also seen. Water extract and sonicate of H. pylori (108 bacteria) increased histamine release from mast cells. A concentration-dependent stimulation of histamine release by water extract or sonicate was also seen. The maximal response of histamine release was seen at the highest concentration of the water extract or sonicate. Conclusions. The results indicated that IL-8 and H. pylori had stimulatory effects on histamine release from canine gastric mucosal mast cells. The results imply that IL-8 and soluble factors of H. pylori may accelerate inflammation of the gastric mucosa via histamine release from mast cells. Received: February 28, 2001 / Accepted: July 6, 2001  相似文献   

5.
In this study, we examined the effect of rebamipide, a mucoprotective drug, on gastric ulcer healing in Mongolian gerbils infected with H. pylori. Male Mongolian gerbils were inoculated with H. pylori or vehicle alone 12 hr after the production of an acetic acid-induced gastric ulcer. On day 5, the gerbils inoculated with H. pylori were divided into three groups and fed rebamipide-containing diet (0.038%, 60 mg/kg, or 0.0038%, 6 mg/kg), or standard laboratory chow. The gerbils inoculated with the vehicle were fed standard laboratory chow throughout the experiment. The gerbils were killed on day 5, 15, or 30 after ulcer production, and removed stomachs were subjected to calculation of ulcer size, culture for H. pylori, and measurement of myeloperoxidase activity, a marker for neutrophil infiltration, in ulcerated tissue. Apoptotic and proliferating cells of gastric epithelium in ulcer margins were detected by the in situ DNA nick end-labeling method and immunohistochemical staining for 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine (BrdU), respectively. Rebamipide did not affect colonization levels of H. pylori. Infection with H. pylori did not affect ulcer size by day 5 but significantly delayed ulcer healing by days 15 and 30, accompanied by an increase in the number of apoptotic cells, a decrease in the number of BrdU-positive cells, and an increase in myeloperoxydase activity. Rebamipide prevented delay of ulcer healing and abolished these effects of H. pylori on cell kinetics and neutrophil infiltration. In conclusion, rebamipide may prevent the delay of acetic acid-induced gastric ulcer healing caused by H. pylori through modulating cell kinetics and inhibiting neutrophil infiltration.  相似文献   

6.
Background. Helicobacter pylori infection is associated not only with gastroduodenal ulcers but with the development of gastric cancer. Interleukin-1 β (IL-1 β) is a potent inhibitor of gastric secretion. The −31 C-to-T base transition in the intron of this gene has been reported to be involved in carcinogenic changes within the stomach, especially in H. pylori-infected individuals. Methods. In this study, the −511 T-to-C polymorphism in the IL-1 β gene was investigated in 669 patients with gastric diseases. Results. The allelic frequencies of the C allele, which indicates low acid secretion and is a component of a supposedly high-risk genotype for gastric cancer, were 0.48 in H. pylori-negative noncancer controls, 0.52 in H. pylori-positive noncancer controls, 0.57 in subjects with chronic active gastritis (CAG) with H. pylori, 0.58 in subjects with intestinal metaplasia (IM) or CAG without H. pylori, and 0.52 in gastric cancer patients. Significant differences among the groups were observed between the IM or CAG without H. pylori group and the gastric cancer group and between the IM or CAG without H. pylori group and the H. pylori-negative noncancer control group (P < 0.05). Conclusions. The IL-1 β−511 genetic polymorphism was not associated with gastric cancer in a multistep carcinogenesis model. However, in view of the results for the IM or CAG without H. pylori group, the presence of the C allele may also indicate a risk of mucosal atrophy of the stomach in the Japanese population. Received: February 20, 2001 / Accepted: July 6, 2001  相似文献   

7.
Background Rice extract has been shown to protect gastric mucosa from stress-induced damage. In this study, the antibiotic effect and the anti-inflammatory effect of orally administered aqueous rice extract on Helicobacter pylori infection and H. pylori-induced gastritis, respectively, in Mongolian gerbils were investigated.Methods Fifty specific-pathogen-free male Mongolian gerbils, seven weeks old, were divided into four groups: uninfected, untreated animals (group A); uninfected, rice extract-treated animals (group B); H. pylori-infected, untreated animals (group C); and H. pylori-infected, rice extract-treated animals (group D). Group C and D animals were killed 12 weeks after H. pylori infection (i.e., at 19 weeks of age) and group A and B animals were also killed at age 19 weeks. The stomachs were removed for histopathological examination with hematoxylin-and-eosin staining and anti-5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) immunostaining, and to determine the bacterial burden. Serum anti-H. pylori antibody titers were also tested.Results In groups A and B, the gastric mucosa showed no inflammatory cell infiltration and a few BrdU-reactive cells. Group C animals developed marked chronic active gastritis in the gastric mucosa, and BrdU-labeled cells in the gastric mucosa markedly increased in number. In group D animals, a significant reduction occurred in the degree of neutrophilic polymorphonuclear cell infiltration into the gastric mucosa, in the BrdU-labeling indices of gastric epithelial cells, and in anti-H. pylori antibody titers in the serum (P < 0.01), compared with although H. pylori was not completely eradicated.Conclusions The rice extract was effective in suppressing inflammation and epithelial cell proliferation in the gastric mucosa in H. pylori-infected Mongolian gerbils. The rice extract has potential to exhibit a protective effect on H. pylori-related gastric mucosal diseases.  相似文献   

8.
Objective The outcome of a Helicobacter pylori infection is related in part to interrelationships among H. pylori virulence factors and the H. pylori-induced mucosal response. The host inflammatory response is partly governed by polymorphisms in pro-inflammatory genes.

Material and methods Cytokine levels (interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6 and IL-8) were examined in H. pylori-infected and uninfected normal-appearing mucosa from patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia (NUD), margins of gastric ulcers and cancer tissues. Cytokine levels were compared with cagA genotypes and host interleukin (IL)-1 polymorphisms.

Results The study comprised 168 Thai patients. All infected patients possessed anti-CagA antibody. Gastric mucosal IL-8 levels were significantly higher in H. pylori-positive cases than in -negative cases in all three tissue types (e.g. 1115 versus 217?pg/mg protein for NUD) (p<0.001). Normal-appearing but H. pylori-infected antral mucosa of patients with cagA type 1a strains had higher IL-8 levels than those with type 2a strains (2632 versus 1036 pg/mg protein) (p<0.005). IL-1B-511T/T carriers had higher antral mucosal IL-1β levels versus non-carriers (pg/mg protein) (T/T=221, T/C=178, C/C=70) (p=0.005). IL-1B-511T/T carriers also had higher IL-1β levels versus non-carriers in H. pylori-negative patients.

Conclusions It was found that both the host factors (IL-1 polymorphisms) and bacterial factors (cagA type 1a versus type 2a) influenced gastric mucosal cytokine levels. Future studies should concentrate on interactions among host factors (e.g. genetics and tissue responses) and bacterial and environmental factors.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Background: Helicobacter pylori is a human gastric carcinogen. Sterigmatocystin (ST), a fungus toxin, is a risk factor of gastric cancer. Cytotoxin-vacuolation toxin A (VacA) present in supernatants of H. pylori suspensions can cause gastritis and ulcer. The aim of this study was to examine the effects of H. pylori, ST and VacA in Mongolian gerbils. Methods: Male Mongolian gerbils (n = 196) were treated with H. pylori supernatants (10 ml/1000 mg) mixed with diet or inoculated intragastrically with H. pylori alone or with ST (100 or 1000 ppb), and then killed 27 months later. Gastric tissue sections were stained with haematoxylin and eosin (H&;E), periodic acid-Schiff (PAS), Alcian blue (AB, pH 2.5) and with immunostaining for PCNA and p53 expression. Results: In H. pylori-infected gerbils, the normal mucosa was replaced by hyperplastic epithelium. Severe gastritis, cystic dilatation of gastric glands, hyperplastic polyps and intestinal metaplasia were observed. In H. pylori + ST (1000 ppb) gerbils, intestinal metaplasia was significantly more frequent than in H. pylori alone animals. No pathological changes were observed in the H. pylori supernatant group. Osseous metaplasia was observed in the H. pylori + ST (100 ppb) group. Serum gastrin levels of the H. pylori + ST (1000 ppb) group were significantly higher than those of the other groups. PCNA labelling index and p53 index of infected gerbils were significantly higher than those of uninfected groups. Conclusion: H. pylori causes gastritis, ulcer and intestinal metaplasia. ST enhances the development of intestinal metaplasia and increases gastrin levels in H. pylori-infected Mongolian gerbils.  相似文献   

11.
Background Cilostazol, a specific type-III phosphodiesterase inhibitor, is widely used for the treatment of ischemic symptoms of peripheral vascular disease. Recent studies have reported that the mechanism of cilostazol is related to the suppression of pro-inflammatory cytokine production and improvement of local microcirculation disturbances. The pathogenesis of stress-induced gastric mucosal lesions is characterized by the activation of inflammatory cells and the production of inflammatory cytokines. The effects of cilostazol on the development of gastric mucosal lesions have not been reported. In the present study, we examined the effect of a cilostazol on water-immersion stress-induced gastric mucosal lesions. Methods Rats were subjected to water-immersion stress with or without pretreatment with a single intraperitoneal injection of the selective type-III phosphodiesterase inhibitor, cilostazol. We measured the gastric mucosal lesion and the concentrations of myeloperoxidase (MPO), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), and cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant-1 (GRO/CINC-1), as an index of neutrophil accumulation and pro-inflammatory cytokine production. Results Cilostazol ameliorated the gastric mucosal injury induced by water-immersion stress (P < 0.001). The gastric contents of MPO, TNF-α, IL-1β, and CRO/CINC-1 were all increased after water-immersion stress and were reduced to almost normal levels by cilostazol. Conclusions In this study, we demonstrated that a selective type-III phosphodiesterase inhibitor, cilostazol, inhibited stress-induced gastric inflammation and damage via suppressing the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Cilostazol may be useful for preventing gastric mucosal lesions.  相似文献   

12.
Background: Nitric oxide (NO) plays an important role in gastrointestinal mucosal protection. We have previously shown that Helicobacter pylori infection is associated with a lower concentration of NO in the human stomach. The aim of this study is to explore the pathogenesis of this finding using an animal model. Methods: Mongolian gerbils were divided into four groups: H. pylori-negative and -positive, each with and without the intraperitoneal addition of superoxide dismutase (SOD). Intraluminal NO and serum nitrate were measured by using a chemiluminescence system. Inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) levels in gastric mucosa were measured by using the NOSdetect Assay Kit. Results: iNOS levels in H. pylori-positive gerbils were significantly greater than in those without infection. Intraluminal NO levels in H. pylori-positive gerbils were significantly lower than those in H. pylori-negative ones and increased after SOD administration. Serum nitrate levels in H. pylori-positive gerbils were significantly greater than those in H. pylori negative ones and decreased after SOD administration. Conclusions: The low level of NO in the gastric lumen in H. pylori infection is likely a result of superoxide production related to H. pylori-induced inflammation.  相似文献   

13.
C-X-C Chemokines play an important role for neutrophil extravasation through microvessels. Although the level of interleukin (IL)-8 is known to increase in the Helicobacter pylori-infected gastric mucosa, another C-X-C chemokine, GROα, has not been evaluated in the H. pylori-associated gastric mucosal injury. The present study was designed to investigate gastric contents of GROα in relation to those of IL-8 in the gastric mucosa of H. pylori-infected peptic ulcer patients. Thirty-eight patients with gastric ulcer and 41 with gastritis underwent endoscopy with informed consent and 49 were found to be H. pylori positive and 30 H. pylori negative. Biopsies from the gastric corpus were performed in each patient to examine the H. pylori colonization by bacterial culture, the rapid urease test and histological specimens as well as measurement of the contents of human GROα and IL-8. Helicobacter pylori infection was eradicated in 21 patients by triple therapy (lansoprazole 30mg, amoxycillin 2.0g, clarithromycin 600 mg; 2 weeks). The samples for GROα and IL-8 assay were homogenized in 0.02% aprotinin containing phosphate-buffered solution and the mucosal contents of GROα and IL-8 in the supernatants were quantified by sandwich enzyme immunoassay methods. The levels of GROα and IL-8 in H. pylori-positive gastric mucosa were significantly higher than those in the H. pylori-negative mucosa. There was a significant linear correlation between the levels of GROα and IL-8 (r= 0.798, P < 0.01). After the eradication of H. pylori by the triple therapy, the levels of GROα and IL-8 were significantly decreased. The GROα showed an increase in the H. pylori-positive gastric mucosa in a similar fashion as IL-8 contents, suggesting a pathogenetic role for GROα in H. pylori-associated gastric mucosal injury.  相似文献   

14.
Although gastric cancer formation with H. pylori in Mongolian gerbils was recently reported, the same inoculation procedure did not result in cancer formation in other animals such as mice. Disturbed regulation of apoptosis and cell proliferation are known to link the multistep process of carcinogenesis. The present study is designed to examine the level of gastric epithelial cell apoptosis in Mongolian gerbils colonized with the H. pylori (Sydney strain: SS1) in comparison with that in mice. Mice (C57BL/6) and Mongolian gerbils were orally inoculated with SS1 and the stomachs were examined 9 and 18 months later. MPO activity increased persistently in gerbils, but increased transiently in mice. While the levels of DNA fragmentation, caspase-3 activity, and the number of TUNEL-positive cells increased significantly in mice, such parameters were attenuated in gerbils. On the other hand, the number of PCNA-positive cells increased after SS1 inoculation only in Mongolian gerbils, suggesting the enhancement of cell turnover in H. pylori-colonized gerbils. In conclusion, the SS1-induced increase in gastric mucosal apoptosis observed in mice was attenuated significantly in Mongolian gerbils, suggesting the causative role for the higher incidence of gastric carcinogenesis in this animal.  相似文献   

15.
Gastric infection with Helicobacter pylori results in chronic active gastritis and in some individuals is associated with complications such as peptic ulceration and gastric cancers. A balance between bacterial factors and host responses may determine disease outcome. The mouse-adapted H. pylori strain SS1 has been utilized as a model to study disease pathogenesis. Although chronic gastritis is observed in this murine model of H. pylori infection, other complications of disease seen in the human host (such as peptic ulceration) are not identified. The objectives of this study were to characterize virulence factors of the mouse-adapted H. pylori strain SS1 and determine host responses to infection. Vacuolating cytotoxin activity of H. pylori strain SS1 was determined after incubation of HEp-2 cells with culture supernatant for 24 hr. Polymerase chain reaction was performed to detect the presence of the cagA and cagE genes. Chemokine responses from human gastric epithelial cells infected with H. pylori SS1 were assessed by measurement of the concentration of interleukin-8 in cell-free supernatants. C57BL/6 and gld mice were infected with strain SS1 or sham-infected. Eight weeks following infection, gastric tissues were obtained for histological analysis and surface hydrophobicity was measured by axisymmetric drop-shape analysis. H. pylori strain SS1 was cytotoxin negative, cagA positive, and cagE positive, but induced only a modest interleukin-8 response (684 ± 140 pg/ml) from AGS gastric epithelial cells in comparison to a clinical isolate (4170 ± 410 pg/ml, P < 0.0005). Increased inflammation was observed in the stomachs of H. pylori strain SS1-infected animals compared to uninfected controls. Gastritis was not associated with any disease complications. Despite mucosal inflammation, infected mice did not demonstrate alterations in gastric surface hydrophobicity (42.2° ± 2.2° and 41.4° ± 3.2° for C57BL/6 and gld, respectively) compared to uninfected mice (43.2° ± 2.3° and 39.5° ± 1.6°, respectively). In conclusion, murine infection with H. pylori SS1, which contains putative bacterial virulence factors, results in gastric inflammation. However, the mucosal changes are not associated with alterations in surface hydrophobicity. Therefore, the mouse model of infection with H. pylori, strain SS1 may not serve as an entirely appropriate model to study host factors associated with disease complications.  相似文献   

16.
The purpose of the study was to quantify gastric mucosal macrophages and define their association with the histopathologic features of stomach biopsies obtained from Helicobacter pylori-infected and uninfected children. Endoscopically obtained gastric biopsies from symptomatic children were independently evaluated by two groups of pathologists. Thirty children were evaluated; 14 were H. pylori-infected. H. pylori positivity was determined by hematoxylin and eosin (H&E), Giemsa, Warthin-Starry and an H. pylori-specific immunoperoxidase stain. A macrophage-specific, KP-1, immunoperoxidase stain was used to quantify positive cells. Inflammatory cell infiltrates were graded by severity with scores of mild to severe. Increased numbers of gastric mucosal macrophages were observed in biopsies of H. pylori-infected versus uninfected children (P < 0.05) and correlated with gastritis severity. The role of this inflammatory cell the in persistence of gastric mucosal inflammation in H. pylori infection warrants further study to develop targeted immunotherapeutic strategies.  相似文献   

17.

Background  

The renin–angiotensin system (RAS) plays an important role in normal homeostasis, carcinogenesis-related angiogenesis, and cell proliferation. Helicobacter pylori infection causes infiltration of inflammatory cells into the gastric mucosa and is considered the major cause of gastric cancer. Whether RAS plays a role in H. pylori infection-related gastric diseases remains unclear. We investigated the changes in gastric mucosal angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1R) and type 2 receptor (AT2R) mRNA levels throughout the time course of H. pylori infection in Mongolian gerbils.  相似文献   

18.
Background: Helicobacter pylori plays a key role in production of reactive oxygen metabolites (ROMs). However, the importance of virulent CagA-positive H. pylori strains remains to be determined. The aim of this study was to assess ROMs production in gastric biopsies of patients infected by H. pylori. Results were correlated to CagA status and acute inflammatory infiltration. Methods: Patients undergoing gastroscopy were enrolled. H. pylori infection was assessed by histology and 13C urea breath test. CagA status was assessed through serology. ROMs were assayed in gastric biopsies by luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence (CLS). Gastric mucosal inflammation was histologically graded and neutrophils were individually counted. Macroscopical damage was scored according to a modified Lanza score. Results: 40 out of 60 patients evaluated were H. pylori (HP) positive. Of the 40 infected patients, 24 were CagA-positive. CLS emission was significantly higher in HP-CagA-positive patients than in HP-CagA-negatives and uninfected. ROMs production showed a significant correlation to neutrophil infiltrate in all groups. Conclusions: Gastric mucosa of patients infected by HP-CagA-positive strains is characterized by a higher generation of ROMs and by greater neutrophil counts than that observed in HP-CagA-negative subjects. Since ROMs production is associated with DNA oxidative damage, a long-term stimulation by these strains might be relevant in the pathogenesis of gastric malignancies. Assessment of CagA status might be useful to discriminate patients in which H. pylori eradication is advisable.  相似文献   

19.
Long-term effects of Helicobacter pylori eradication in Mongolian gerbils   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Background: In this study, to clarify whether Helicobacter pylori eradication alters the course of the development of gastric mucosal changes in the stomach, we examined the long-term effects of H. pylori eradication on H. pylori-inoculated gerbils. Methods: A total of 40 H. pylori-inoculated gerbils were randomized and subjected, at 22 months after inoculation, to eradication treatment with dual therapy of omeprazole plus clarithromycin, or with therapy with a novel quinolone compound, Y-34867, alone. The animals were killed at the start of administration (control group) or at 8 months after the completion of therapy (vehicle or eradication-treatment groups). Results: Severe histopathological changes in the gastric mucosa were observed in all H. pylori-inoculated gerbils at the start of administration. At 8 months after completion of therapy, the frequency of gastritis, erosion, intestinal metaplasia, and gastric carcinoid in the eradication therapy groups was markedly reduced compared with that in the control and vehicle groups. Values for anti-H. pylori IgG titer, bacterial counts, and gastrin also decreased significantly. Conclusions: These results suggest that H. pylori eradication may have had a therapeutic effect not only on gastritis, erosion, and gastric ulcer but also on glandular atrophy, intestinal metaplasia, and gastric carcinoid. Received: November 8, 2001 / Accepted: May 31, 2002 Reprint requests to: F. Hirayama  相似文献   

20.
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