نتایج جستجو برای: gastric epithelial cells helicobacter pylori

تعداد نتایج: 1535868  

2012
Hirofumi Shimomura

Helicobacter pylori is a Gram-negative microaerobic curved-rod possessing polar flagella as the motility organ. This bacterium colonizes human gastric epithelium and causes chronic gastritis and peptic ulcers (Graham, 1991; Warren & Marshall, 1983; Wyatt & Dixon, 1988). Via longer periods of colonization in the human stomach, it also contributes to the development of gastric cancer and marginal...

2012
Gyeong Hoon Kang

Gastric cancers arise through a multistep process characterized by the progressive accumulation of molecular alterations in which genetic and epigenetic mechanisms have been implicated. Gastric cancer is one of the human malignancies in which aberrant promoter CpG island hypermethylation is frequently found. Helicobacter pylori and Epstein-Barr virus, which are known carcinogens for gastric can...

2014
Barry Marshall

Helicobacter pylori infection induces gastric inflammation, ulcer, and cancer. H. pylori infection is coordinated in a cascade manner that helps it to colonize in the host. Colonization of bacterium starts by adapting itself to the harsh acidic environment in the stomach. H. pylori has the necessary machinery to neutralise the pH of its surroundings. It also has the ability to sense the pH of i...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 2001
D Kuck B Kolmerer C Iking-Konert P H Krammer W Stremmel J Rudi

Helicobacter pylori induces cell death by apoptosis. However, the apoptosis-inducing factor is still unknown. The virulence factor vacuolating cytotoxin A (VacA) is a potential candidate, and thus its role in apoptosis induction was investigated in the human gastric epithelial cell line AGS. The supernatant from the vacA wild-type strain P12 was able to induce apoptotic cell death, whereas the ...

2015
Zhen Yang Chuan Xie Wenting Xu Gongmeizi Liu Ximei Cao Wei Li Jiang Chen Yin Zhu Shiwen Luo Zhijun Luo Nonghua Lu

Phosphorylation of PTEN at residues Ser380/Thr382/383 leads to loss of phosphatase activity and tumor suppressor function. Here, we found that phosphorylation of PTEN at residues Ser380/Thr382/383 was increased with gastric carcinogenesis, and more importantly, Helicobacter pylori was a trigger of this modification in chronic non-atrophic gastritis. H. pylori could phosphorylate and inactivate ...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 1995
S A Sharma M K Tummuru G G Miller M J Blaser

Gastric infection with Helicobacter pylori activates a mucosal inflammatory response by mononuclear cells and neutrophils that includes expression of cytokines interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), IL-6, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and IL-8. In this study, we analyzed the IL-8 response of human gastric cancer cell lines (Kato III, AGS, and MKN28) to H. pylori infection in vitro. IL-8 mRNA expression...

2013
Sandro Montefusco Roberta Esposito Luca D’Andrea Maria Chiara Monti Ciara Dunne Brendan Dolan Alessandra Tosco Liberato Marzullo Marguerite Clyne

The trefoil peptides (TFF1, TFF2 and TFF3) are a family of small highly conserved proteins that play an essential role in epithelial regeneration within the gastrointestinal tract, where they are mainly expressed. TFF1 expression is strongly induced after mucosal injury and it has been proposed that tff1 functions as a gastric tumor suppressor gene. Several studies confirm that tff1 expression ...

2012
Wei Guang William S. Twaddell Erik P. Lillehoj

Interleukin (IL)-8-driven neutrophil infiltration of the gastric mucosa is pathognomonic of persistent Helicobacter pylori infection. Our prior study showed that ectopic over-expression of MUC1 in human AGS gastric epithelial cells reduced H. pylori-stimulated IL-8 production compared with cells expressing MUC1 endogenously. Conversely, Muc1 knockout (Muc1(-/-)) mice displayed an increased leve...

2013
Yimin Feng Lixiang Wang Jiping Zeng Li Shen Xiuming Liang Han Yu Shili Liu Zhifang Liu Yundong Sun Wenjuan Li Chunyan Chen Jihui Jia

Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infections are strongly implicated in human gastric mucosa–associated diseases. Forkhead box M1 (FoxM1), a key positive regulator of cell proliferation, is overexpressed in gastric cancer. MicroRNAs are important post-transcriptional regulators of gene expression. In this study, the effects of H. pylori infection on FoxM1 expression and possible mechanisms of car...

Journal: :Journal of medical microbiology 2002
Zun-Wu Zhang Nick Dorrell Brendan W Wren Michael J G Farthingt

Helicobacter pylori is a major aetiological agent in gastroduodenal disorders and adherence of the bacteria to the gastric mucosa is one of the initial stages of infection. Although a number of specific adhesins has been identified, other H. pylori virulence factors may play a role in adherence to gastric epithelial cells directly or through interaction with other adhesins. This study assessed ...

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