| Literature DB >> 30205817 |
Wei-Lun Chang1, Yi-Chun Yeh1, Bor-Shyang Sheu2,3.
Abstract
Although most H. pylori infectors are asymptomatic, some may develop serious disease, such as gastric adenocarcinoma, gastric high-grade B cell lymphoma and peptic ulcer disease. Epidemiological and basic studies have provided evidence that infection with H. pylori carrying specific virulence factors can lead to more severe outcome. The virulence factors that are associated with gastric adenocarcinoma development include the presence, expression intensity and types of cytotoxin-associated gene A (CagA, especially EPIYA-D type and multiple copies of EPIYA-C) and type IV secretion system (CagL polymorphism) responsible for its translocation into the host cells, the genotypes of vacuolating cytotoxin A (vacA, s1/i1/m1 type), and expression intensity of blood group antigen binding adhesin (BabA, low-producer or chimeric with BabB). The presence of CagA is also related to gastric high-grade B cell lymphoma occurrence. Peptic ulcer disease is closely associated with cagA-genopositive, vacA s1/m1 genotype, babA2-genopositive (encodes BabA protein), presence of duodenal ulcer promoting gene cluster (dupA cluster) and induced by contact with epithelium gene A1 (iceA1), and expression status of outer inflammatory protein (OipA). The prevalence of these virulence factors is diverse among H. pylori isolated from different geographic areas and ethnic groups, which may explain the differences in disease incidences. For example, in East Asia where gastric cancer incidence is highest worldwide, almost all H. pylori isolates were cagA genopositive, vacA s1/i1/m1 and BabA-expressing. Therefore, selection of appropriate virulence markers and testing methods are important when using them to determine risk of diseases. This review summarizes the evidences of H. pylori virulence factors in relation with gastroduodenal diseases and discusses the geographic differences and appropriate methods of analyzing these virulence markers.Entities:
Keywords: Gastric B cell lymphoma; Gastric adenocarcinoma; Helicobacter pylori; Peptic ulcer disease; Virulence factors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30205817 PMCID: PMC6131906 DOI: 10.1186/s12929-018-0466-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Sci ISSN: 1021-7770 Impact factor: 8.410
The 3 categories of H. pylori virulence factors and their functions
| The three categories of virulence factors | Biological functions or associated diseases |
|---|---|
|
|
|
| Urease | Neutralize gastric acid |
| Flagella Chemotaxis system | Bacterial movement to epithelial surface & deep gland |
| Adhesins | Adherence to gastric epithelial cells |
| • BabA | |
| • SabA | |
| • Lewis antigens | |
| • OipA | |
|
|
|
| LPS & Flagella | Low immunogenicity |
| CagA & T4SS | Suppress phagocytosis |
| VacA | Suppress phagocytosis |
| Gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase | Induce tolerogenic dendritic cell |
| Cholesterol-α-glucosyltransferase | Suppress phagocytosis |
| Catalase Superoxide dismutase | Suppress and ROS & NO |
| Arginase | Suppress ROS & NO |
|
|
|
| CagA & T4SS | Gastric adenocarcinoma, MALToma & PUD |
| VacA | Gastric adenocarcinoma & PUD |
| BabA | Gastric adenocarcinoma & PUD |
| HtrA | Gastric adenocarcinoma |
| DupA | Duodenal ulcer |
| IceA | PUD |
| OipA | PUD |
LPS Lipopolysaccharide, T4SS type IV secretion system, ROS reactive oxygen species, NO nitric oxide, PUD peptic ulcer disease
The H. pylori virulence factors associated with gastric adenocarcinoma
| Region | Virulence factor (High risk marker) | Odds ratio | Analytic method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| East Asia | CagL Y58E59 (vs. non-Y58E59) | 4.6 | DNA sequencing | [ |
| Bab AB BA recombination (vs. others) | 6.2 | PCR | [ | |
| Middle Asia | 10.9 | PCR | [ | |
| Middle East | 4.0 | PCR | [ | |
| 2.5 | PCR | [ | ||
| 5.3 | PCR | [ | ||
| 15.0 | PCR | [ | ||
| Asia | EPIYA-D motif of CagA (vs. EPIYA-C) | 1.9 | DNA sequencing | [ |
| Western countries | Positive serum anti-CagA Ab | 2.0 | Serum ELISA | [ |
| 2.4 | PCR or Immunoblot | [ | ||
| ≥ 2 copies of EPIYA-C motifs of CagA (vs. 1 copy) | 3.3 | DNA sequencing | [ | |
| Western EPIYA-B motif of CagA (vs. EPIYT-B) | 3.0 | DNA sequencing | [ | |
| 5.3 | PCR | [ | ||
| 2.5 | PCR | [ | ||
| 4.4 | PCR | [ | ||
| BabA-L (vs. BabA-negative) | 33.9 | Immunoblot | [ | |
| BabA-H (vs. BabA-negative) | 18.2 | Immunoblot | [ | |
| 2.4 | DNA sequencing or immunoblot | [ |
PCR Polymerase chain reaction
The H. pylori virulence factors associated with peptic ulcer disease
| Region | Virulence factor (High risk marker) | Odds ratio | Analytic method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| East Asia | ≥ 2 copies of EPIYA-C motifs of CagA increases DU risk (vs. 1 copy) | 2.3 | DNA sequencing | [ |
| Southeast Asia | 2.8 | PCR | [ | |
| 1.5 | PCR | [ | ||
| Middle East | 3.1 | PCR | [ | |
| 1.8 | PCR | [ | ||
| Asia | 1.6 | PCR | [ | |
| Western countries | 1.7 | PCR or Immunoblot | [ | |
| 1.7 | PCR | [ | ||
| 2.0 | PCR | [ | ||
| 2.1 | PCR | [ | ||
| BabA-L (vs. BabA-negative) | 54.8 | Immunoblot | [ | |
| BabA-H (vs. BabA-negative) | 19.8 | Immunoblot | [ | |
| 2.1 | PCR | [ | ||
| 1.3 | PCR | [ | ||
| 4.0 | DNA sequencing or immunoblot | [ |
PCR Polymerase chain reaction