نتایج جستجو برای: caga protein

تعداد نتایج: 1235914  

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2006
Marc Roger Couturier Elizabetta Tasca Cesare Montecucco Markus Stein

Development of severe gastric diseases is strongly associated with those strains of Helicobacter pylori that contain the cag pathogenicity island (PAI) inserted into the chromosome. The cag PAI encodes a type IV secretion system that translocates the major disease-associated virulence protein, CagA, into the host epithelial cell. CagA then affects host signaling pathways, leading to cell elonga...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2014
Dragana Nešić Ludovico Buti Xin Lu C Erec Stebbins

The Cytotoxin associated gene A (CagA) protein of Helicobacter pylori is associated with increased virulence and risk of cancer. Recent proteomic studies have demonstrated an association of CagA with the human tumor suppressor Apoptosis-stimulating Protein of p53-2 (ASPP2). We present here a genetic, biochemical, and structural analysis of CagA with ASPP2. Domain delineation of the 120-kDa CagA...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2016
Rui M Ferreira Ines Pinto-Ribeiro Xiaogang Wen Ricardo Marcos-Pinto Mário Dinis-Ribeiro Fátima Carneiro Ceu Figueiredo

Heterogeneity at the Helicobacter pylori cagA gene promoter region has been linked to variation in CagA expression and gastric histopathology. Here, we characterized the cagA promoter and expression in 46 H. pylori strains from Portugal. Our results confirm the relationship between cagA promoter region variation and protein expression originally observed in strains from Colombia. We observed th...

2016
Luisa F. Jiménez-Soto Rainer Haas

CagA is one of the most studied pathogenicity factors of the bacterial pathogen Helicobacter pylori. It is injected into host cells via the H. pylori cag-Type IV secretion system. Due to its association with gastric cancer, CagA is classified as oncogenic protein. At the same time CagA represents the 4(th) most abundant protein produced by H. pylori, suggesting that high amounts of toxin are re...

Journal: :International journal of oncology 2014
Shuaiyin Chen Guangcai Duan Rongguang Zhang Qingtang Fan

Persistent infection with Helicobacter pylori confers an increased risk for the development of gastric cancer. In our previous investigations, we found that ENO1 was overexpression in cagA-positive H. pylori-infected gastric epithelial AGS cells by proteomic method, in contrast to the isogenic cagA knock out mutant H. pylori-infected cells. ENO1 is a newly identified oncoprotein overexpressed i...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011
Ludovico Buti Eric Spooner Annemarthe G Van der Veen Rino Rappuoli Antonello Covacci Hidde L Ploegh

Type I strains of Helicobacter pylori (Hp) possess a pathogenicity island, cag, that encodes the effector protein cytotoxin-associated gene A (CagA) and a type four secretion system. After translocation into the host cell, CagA affects cell shape, increases cell motility, abrogates junctional activity, and promotes an epithelial to mesenchymal transition-like phenotype. Transgenic expression of...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2010
Angela Jurik Elisabeth Hausser Stefan Kutter Isabelle Pattis Sandra Prassl Evelyn Weiss Wolfgang Fischer

Bacterial type IV secretion systems are macromolecule transporters with essential functions for horizontal gene transfer and for symbiotic and pathogenic interactions with eukaryotic host cells. Helicobacter pylori, the causative agent of type B gastritis, peptic ulcers, gastric adenocarcinoma, and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma, uses the Cag type IV secretion system to injec...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2012
Burcu Kaplan-Türköz Luisa F Jiménez-Soto Cyril Dian Claudia Ertl Han Remaut Arthur Louche Tommaso Tosi Rainer Haas Laurent Terradot

Infection with the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori is a risk factor for the development of gastric cancer. Pathogenic strains of H. pylori carry a type IV secretion system (T4SS) responsible for the injection of the oncoprotein CagA into host cells. H. pylori and its cag-T4SS exploit α5β1 integrin as a receptor for CagA translocation. Injected CagA localizes to the inner leaflet of the hos...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 1995
Z Xiang S Censini P F Bayeli J L Telford N Figura R Rappuoli A Covacci

Colonization of the mucosa of the stomach and the duodenum by Helicobacter pylori is the major cause of acute and chronic gastroduodenal pathologies in humans. Duodenal ulcer formation strongly correlates with the expression of an antigen (CagA) that is usually coeexpressed with the vacuolating cytotoxin (VacA), a protein that causes ulceration in the stomach of mice. However, the relationship ...

2017
Alexander Link Cosima Langner Wiebke Schirrmeister Wiebke Habendorf Jochen Weigt Marino Venerito Ina Tammer Dirk Schlüter Philipp Schlaermann Thomas F Meyer Thomas Wex Peter Malfertheiner

AIM To evaluate the frequency of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) CagA antibodies in H. pylori infected subjects and to identify potential histopathological and bacterial factors related to H. pylori CagA-immune response. METHODS Systematic data to H. pylori isolates, blood samples, gastric biopsies for histological and molecular analyses were available from 99 prospectively recruited subjects...

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