| Literature DB >> 24212943 |
Eun-Hee Kim1, Kyung-Sook Hong, Hua Hong, Ki Baik Hahm.
Abstract
Epidemiological and experimental evidence has emerged that a dysregulated inflammation is associated with most of the tumors, and many studies have begun to unravel the molecular pathways linking inflammation and cancer. As a typical example linking these associations, Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection-associated atrophic gastritis has been recognized as precursor lesion of gastric cancer. The identification of transcription factors such as NF-κB and STAT3, and their gene products such as IL-8, COX-2, iNOS, cytokines, chemokines and their receptors, etc have laid the molecular foundation for our understanding of the decisive role of inflammation in carcinogenesis. In addition to the role as the initiator of cancer, inflammation contributes to survival and proliferation of malignant cells, tumor angiogenesis, and even metastasis. In this review, the fundamental mechanisms of H. pylori-induced carcinogenesis as well as the possibility of cancer prevention through suppressing H. pylori-induced inflammation are introduced. We infer that targeting inflammatory pathways have a potential role to detour the unpleasant journey to H. pylori-associated gastric carcinogenesis.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 24212943 PMCID: PMC3759184 DOI: 10.3390/cancers3033018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1.Helicobacter pylori induce the inflammatory signals in vitro. (A) The amounts of IL-8 were analyzed by ELISA assay in media supernatant from the AGS cells after treatment with H. pylori 100 MOI (multiplicity of infection) for 0, 6, 12, 24 h. (B) H. pylori induced the mRNA expressions of IL-8 and COX-2 in AGS cells. AGS cells were treated with 100 MOI H. pylori for the indicated time periods.
Figure 2.Helicobacter pylori induce the inflammatory signals in vivo. (A) Chronic infection of H. pylori induces the expression of COX-2 and iNOS in gastric mucosa in vivo. 5-week-old IL-10-/- mice inoculated H. pylori and sacrificed after 28 weeks. The protein levels of COX-2 and iNOS were determined by Western blot analysis and quantification of COX-2 or iNOS immunoblot was normalized to that of β-actin followed by statistical analysis of relative image density. Representative 3 cases of 17 mice per group were presented. * p < 0.05. (B) Chronic infection of H. pylori induces the phosphorylation of JAK2 and STAT3 in gastric mucosa from IL-10-/- mice. Western blots were probed with anti-phospho-STAT3 (p-STAT3), anti-p-STAT1 and anti-p-JAK2 antibodies. The most representative bands per group were presented. * p < 0.05.
Figure 3.Detouring the road to H. pylori-associated carcinogenesis through alleviating gastric inflammation. (A) In spite of IARC definition that H. pylori infection is class I carcinogen, more than 80% among population infected with H. pylori remains asymptomatic, about which no clear explanation has not been forwarded. On the other hand, H. pylori infection is apparently associated with the emergence of precancerous lesion and some gastric malignancy. Host genetic polymorphisms, environmental factors, H. pylori strains, and host immune response might affect the outcome, but the common fact is that chronic gastric inflammation is the fundamental basis for H. pylori-associated gastric carcinogenesis. (B) Multiple lines of evidence had suggested the detouring the unpleasant journey to H. pylori-associated gastric carcinogenesis seems to be the effective strategy to prevent H. pylori-associated gastric cancer, for which COX-2 inhibitor, antioxidants, anti-inflammatory drug, phytoceuticals, and others had been documented.