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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Helicobacter pylori downregulates expression of human β-defensin 1 in the gastric mucosa in a type IV secretion-dependent fashion

TLDR
Data indicate that H. pylori downregulates hβD1 expression via NF‐κB signalling, and suggest that this may promote bacterial survival and persistence in the gastric niche.
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori establishes a chronic lifelong infection in the human gastric mucosa, which may lead to peptic ulcer disease or gastric adenocarcinoma. The human beta-defensins (hβDs) are antimicrobial peptides, hβD1 being constitutively expressed in the human stomach. We hypothesized that H. pylori may persist, in part, by downregulating gastric hβD1 expression. We measured hβD1 and hβD2 expression in vivo in relation to the presence, density and severity of H. pylori infection, investigated differential effects of H. pylori virulence factors, and studied underlying signalling mechanisms in vitro. Significantly lower hβD1 and higher hβD2 mRNA and protein concentrations were present in gastric biopsies from infected patients. Those patients with higher-level bacterial colonization and inflammation had significantly lower hβD1 expression, but there were no differences in hβD2. H. pylori infection of human gastric epithelial cell lines also downregulated hβD1. Using wild-type strains and isogenic mutants, we showed that a functional cag pathogenicity island-encoded type IV secretion system induced this downregulation. Treatment with chemical inhibitors or siRNA revealed that H. pylori usurped NF-κB signalling to modulate hβD1 expression. These data indicate that H. pylori downregulates hβD1 expression via NF-κB signalling, and suggest that this may promote bacterial survival and persistence in the gastric niche.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Pathogenesis of Helicobacter pylori infection.

TL;DR: Recent data is reported on the mechanisms involved in chemotaxis, the essential role of nickel in acid resistance and gastric colonization, on the importance of adhesins and Hop proteins and on the role of CagPAI‐components and CagA.
Journal ArticleDOI

CCL20/CCR6-mediated migration of regulatory T cells to the Helicobacter pylori -infected human gastric mucosa

TL;DR: To identify the homing receptors involved in directing Tregs to the gastric mucosa, and investigate how H pylori stimulates the relevant chemokine responses, gastric biopsy data showed CCL20, CXCL1-3 and IL-8 concentrations were significantly increased in gastricBiopsy samples from H pylonori-infected patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Helicobacter pylori: A Paradigm Pathogen for Subverting Host Cell Signal Transmission

TL;DR: It is shown that H. pylori infections reflect a paradigm for interspecies contact-dependent molecular communication, which includes the disruption of cell-cell junctions and cytoskeletal rearrangements, as well as proinflammatory, cell cycle-related, proliferative, antiapoptotic, and DNA damage responses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differential inflammatory response to Helicobacter pylori infection: etiology and clinical outcomes

TL;DR: Overall, H. pylori is thought to usually modulate inflammation and limit acute damage to the mucosa, enabling the bacteria to persist, and if this delicate balance is disturbed, disease may then develop.
References
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TL;DR: This study enters into the particular topics of the relative quantification in real-time RT-PCR of a target gene transcript in comparison to a reference gene transcript and presents a new mathematical model that needs no calibration curve.
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Shared principles in NF-kappaB signaling

TL;DR: The authors synthesize some of the basic principles that have emerged from studies of NF-kappaB, and aim to generate a more unified view of the regulation of the transcription factor.
Journal ArticleDOI

Translocation of Helicobacter pylori CagA into gastric epithelial cells by type IV secretion.

TL;DR: Modulation of host cells by bacterial protein translocation adds a new dimension to the chronic Helicobacter infection with yet unknown consequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ll-37, the Neutrophil Granule–And Epithelial Cell–Derived Cathelicidin, Utilizes Formyl Peptide Receptor–Like 1 (Fprl1) as a Receptor to Chemoattract Human Peripheral Blood Neutrophils, Monocytes, and T Cells

TL;DR: The results suggest that, in addition to its microbicidal activity, LL-37 may contribute to innate and adaptive immunity by recruiting neutrophils, monocytes, and T cells to sites of microbial invasion by interacting with FPRL1.
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