[PDF][PDF] Helicobacter pylori dampens gut epithelial self-renewal by inhibiting apoptosis, a bacterial strategy to enhance colonization of the stomach

H Mimuro, T Suzuki, S Nagai, G Rieder, M Suzuki… - Cell host & …, 2007 - cell.com
H Mimuro, T Suzuki, S Nagai, G Rieder, M Suzuki, T Nagai, Y Fujita, K Nagamatsu…
Cell host & microbe, 2007cell.com
Colonization of the gastric pits in the stomach by Helicobacter pylori (Hp) is a major risk
factor for gastritis, gastric ulcers, and cancer. Normally, rapid self-renewal of gut epithelia,
which occurs by a balance of progenitor proliferation and pit cell apoptosis, serves as a host
defense mechanism to limit bacterial colonization. To investigate how Hp overcomes this
host defense, we use the Mongolian gerbil model of Hp infection. Apoptotic loss of pit cells
induced by a proapoptotic agent is suppressed by Hp. The ability of Hp to suppress …
Summary
Colonization of the gastric pits in the stomach by Helicobacter pylori (Hp) is a major risk factor for gastritis, gastric ulcers, and cancer. Normally, rapid self-renewal of gut epithelia, which occurs by a balance of progenitor proliferation and pit cell apoptosis, serves as a host defense mechanism to limit bacterial colonization. To investigate how Hp overcomes this host defense, we use the Mongolian gerbil model of Hp infection. Apoptotic loss of pit cells induced by a proapoptotic agent is suppressed by Hp. The ability of Hp to suppress apoptosis contributed to pit hyperplasia and persistent bacterial colonization of the stomach. Infection with WT Hp but not with a mutant in the virulence effector cagA increased levels of the prosurvival factor phospho-ERK and antiapoptotic protein MCL1 in the gastric pits. Thus, CagA activates host cell survival and antiapoptotic pathways to overcome self-renewal of the gastric epithelium and help sustain Hp infection.
cell.com