| Literature DB >> 23217022 |
Song-Ze Ding1, Peng-Yuan Zheng.
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori infection is the major cause of gastric cancer, which remains an important health care challenge. Recent investigation in gastric stem cell or progenitor cell biology has uncovered valuable information in understanding the gastric gland renewal and maintenance of homeostasis, they also provide clues for further defining the mechanisms by which gastric cancer may originate and progress. Lgr5, Villin-promoter, TFF2-mRNA and Mist have recently been identified as gastric stem/progenitor cell markers; their identification enriched our understanding on the gastric stem cell pathobiology during chronic inflammation and metaplasia. In addition, advance in gastric cancer stem cell markers such as CD44, CD90, CD133, Musashi-1 reveal novel information on tumor cell behavior and disease progression implicated for therapeutics. However, two critical questions remain to be of considerable challenges for future exploration; one is how H. pylori or chronic inflammation affects gastric stem cell or their progenitors, which give rise to mucus-, acid-, pepsinogen-, and hormone-secreting cell lineages. Another one is how bacterial infection or inflammation induces oncogenic transformation and propagates into tumors. Focus on the interactions of H. pylori with gastric stem/progenitor cells and their microenvironment will be instrumental to decipher the initiation and origin of gastric cancer. Future studies in these areas will be critical to uncover molecular mechanisms of chronic inflammation-mediated oncogenic transformation and provide options for cancer prevention and intervention. We review recent progress and discuss future research directions in these important research fields.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23217022 PMCID: PMC3536631 DOI: 10.1186/1757-4749-4-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Pathog ISSN: 1757-4749 Impact factor: 4.181
Major virulence factors and their functions
| CagA | 120-140 kDa | Oncoprotein, disrupt cell polarity, multiple cell signaling | [ |
| about 30 genes | Type VI secretion system for CagA, PGN injection, and NF-κB activation | [ | |
| VacA | 88 kDa protein | Vacuolization, apoptosis and inhibiting cell proliferation | [ |
| OMPs | 33 members | Inflammation and adhesion | [ |
CagA cytotoxin-associated antigen A; cagPAI cag-pathogenicity island; VacA vacuolating cytotoxin; PGN peptidoglycan; OMPs outer membrane proteins.
Gastric stem and progenitor cell markers
| Lgr5 | Antral, gland base | Give rise to gastric unit, all four types of cells | [ |
| Villin-promoter | Antral, gland base | Give rise to gastric unit, all four types of cells | [ |
| Tff2 mRNA | Corpus, gland base | Give rise to only parietal, neck, and chief cells | [ |
| Mist1 (BHLHA15) | Corpus, gland base | Chief cell for SPEM generation | [ |
Lgr5 leucine-rich repeat-containing G protein-coupled receptor5 (Lgr5); Villin-promoter Villin-promoter marked stem cells; Tff2 mRNA, Trifold factor 2 mRNA marked stem cells; Mist1 (BHLHA15), basic helix-loop-helix family, member a15.
Putative gastric stem cell and cancer stem cell markers
| CD44 | gland base | sphere formation | tumorigenic | [ |
| CD90 | n/t | sphere formation | tumorigenic | [ |
| CD133 | gland base | yes | tumorigenic | [ |
| Musashi-1 | antral, isthmus/neck | n/t | n/t | [ |
| pSmad2/3L-Thr | isthmus region | n/t | n/t | [ |
CD Cluster of differentiation; n/t not tested; pSmad2/3L-Thr Smad2/3 phosphorylated at specific linker threonine.
Figure 1infection, stem cells and gastric cancer.H. pylori infection induces chronic inflammation within local gastric mucosa; the proinflammatory microenvironment may disrupt stem/progenitor cell proliferation and differentiation. H. pylori- or inflammation-induced molecular damages in these cells could be carried to the descendants and facilitate tumor initiation. In addition, H. pylori CagA-, cagPAI-positive strains induce multiple oncogenic signaling and epigenetic alteration in epithelial cells. Persistent activation of these oncogenic pathways, alterations of epigenetic profile and deregulation of stem cell differentiation provide important molecular mechanisms toward H. pylori- or inflammation-induced carcinogenesis. (Image is for illustration purpose, does not scale to real size or proportion of cells, and is made by Microsoft PowerPoint software; CagA: Cytotoxin-associated antigen A; PGN: Peptidoglycan)