| Literature DB >> 27921009 |
Ying Huang1, Qi-Long Wang2, Dan-Dan Cheng1, Wen-Ting Xu1, Nong-Hua Lu1.
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori is the main pathogenic bacterium involved in chronic gastritis and peptic ulcer and a class 1 carcinogen in gastric cancer. Current research focuses on the pathogenicity of H. pylori and the mechanism by which it colonizes the gastric mucosa. An increasing number of in vivo and in vitro studies demonstrate that H. pylori can invade and proliferate in epithelial cells, suggesting that this process might play an important role in disease induction, immune escape and chronic infection. Therefore, to explore the process and mechanism of adhesion and invasion of gastric mucosa epithelial cells by H. pylori is particularly important. This review examines the relevant studies and describes evidence regarding the adhesion to and invasion of gastric mucosa epithelial cells by H. pylori.Entities:
Keywords: Helicobacter pylori; adhesion; chronic infection; invasion; mechanism
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27921009 PMCID: PMC5118847 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2016.00159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Overview of related studies on .
| Liu et al., | AGS cells | J99 and and its isogenic nudA mutant | FISH, TEM | 12 h | VacA were closely associated with intracellular |
| Chu et al., | AGS cells and MKN45 cells | 238 and its isogenic babA, cagA and vacA mutant, 917, 1076, 1024, 43504, J99 | CLSM, TEM | 6–12 h | The autophagic vesicles induced by |
| Ito K. et al., | Huh7 cells and AGS cells | 43504 and 401C | EM, TEM | 24 h | |
| Terebiznik et al., | AGS cells and CHO-II a cells | 49503 and its isogenic vacA mutant | RFM, CLSM | 48 h | Ability of |
| Kwok et al., | AGS cells, HEp-2 cells and HeLa cells | P1, P12, 26695, J99, P49 | TEM, SEM, CLEM | 12 h | Entry of |
| Amieva et al., | AGS cells, Caco-2 cells and MDCK cells | G27 and its isogenic vacA– and cagA– mutants | VM, IF, CLSM | within 45 min | |
| Petersen et al., | AGS cells | AF4 and its isogenic vacA mutant, G27, 51932 | TEM | 3–24 h | VacA improves the intracellular survival of |
| Zhang et al., | AGS cells | 43504, 26695, SS1, clinicalisolates | TEM | 4–6 h | |
| Lozniewski et al., | AGS cells;Gastric ucosa samples of human gastric xenografts in nude mice | UA948 and UA948 fucTa_a, 26695 and 26695fucTa_b, UA1111 and UA1111fucT2_ | TEM | 6 h; Whitin 2weeks | LeX may be involved in |
| Björkholm et al., | the human epithelial cell, HEp-2 | 88-23, CCUG 17874 and its isogenic vacA mutant | TLP | 1–6 h | H. pylori has the potential to invade epithelial cells actively |
| Zhang et al., | AGS cells, SGC-7901 cells, MDCK cells | X47, SS1 and its isogenic vacA mutant, 88-3887 and its isogenic cagA mutant | EM, PCR | 5 h | CagA and VacA are not related to the ability of invasion and adhesion of H. pylori in different cell lines in vitro |
| Wang et al., | GES-1 cells | clinicalisolates | PCR, E-test, K–B method | 7 or 10 days | |
| Vázquez-Jiménez et al., | AGS cells | clinicalisolates | - | 6 h | there was no correlation between adherence pattern and invasiveness |
| Ozbek et al., | Gastric biopsy specimens of patients with gastric discomfort | clinicalisolates | EM, IHC | – | |
| Semino-Mora et al., | Biopsy specimens of patients with metaplasia, dyspepsia and neoplasm | clinicalisolates | CSLM, ISH, IHC, CLSM, TEM | – | |
| Ito K. et al., | Stomach and gastric lymph nodes of patients with H. pylori infection | clinicalisolates | Real-time PCR, IHC | – |
Cell lines: AGS cells (human gastric adenocarcinoma epithelial cell line); MKN45 (human gastric carcinoma cell line); Huh7 cells (human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line); CHO-II a cells (Chinese hamster ovary cells stably transfected with Fc_IIa receptors); HEp-2 cells (human laryngeal carcinoma cell line); HeLa cells(Human cervix carcinoma cell line); Caco-2 cells(human colon adenocarcinoma cell line); MDCK (the canine kidney tubular epithelial line); SGC-7901 cells (human gastric cancer cell line).
*Gentamicin protection test for all cell experiments.
CLSM, Confocal laser scanning microscopy; MEFs, Murine embryonic fibroblasts; FISH, Fluorescence in situ hybridization; ISH, In situ hybridization; TEM, Transmission electron microscopy; EM, Electron microscopy; SEM, Scanning electron microscope; VM, Video microscopy; TLP, Time-lapse photography; RFM, Ratiometric fluorescence microscopy; CSLM, Concurrently standard light microscopy; Real-time PCR, Real-time polymerase chain reaction; IF, Immunofluorescence; IHC, Immunohistochemistry.
Figure 1Generally, . When the external environment changes and becomes unfavorable, H. pylori invades the epithelial cells and multiplies in double-layer membrane vesicles to seek refuge. After internalization, autophagosomes form to degrade some of the ingested bacteria. Once the external environment becomes favorable, undegraded H. pylori is released from host cells into the external environment for recolonization.