Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.6.1.3 (ATPase)
65,361 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Experimental autoimmune gastritis (EAG) is an excellent model of human autoimmune gastritis, the underlying cause of pernicious anaemia. Murine autoimmune gastritis replicates human gastritis in being characterized by a chronic inflammatory mononuclear cell infiltrate in the gastric mucosa, destruction of parietal and zymogenic cells, and autoantibodies to the alpha-and beta-subunits of the gastric H+/K+ ATPase. Disease is induced strain specifically in gastritis-susceptible BALB/c mice by methods with a greater variety than those for most other experimental autoimmune diseases. The disease is induced in the regional gastric lymph node in which pathogenic CD4+ T cells are recruited. The model provides an excellent illustration of regulation by CD4+CD25+T cells, and, indeed, the removal of such regulatory cells, e.g., by neonatal thymectomy, is thought to be a major mechanism by which disease can develop. The culprit T helper type 1 (Th1) CD4+ T cells recognize either the alpha- or beta-subunits of the gastric H+/K+ ATPase, but the beta-subunit appears to be the initiating autoantigen, while the alpha-subunit may have a role in perpetuating disease. Since no specific environmental modifiers are identifiable, the origins of the disease are intrinsic; this is illustrated by the capacity of a cytokine (GM-CSF)-dependent inflammatory stimulus in the stomach to initiate EAG, according to a transgenic model in which thymectomy is dispensible. Thus, EAG is an exquisite model for a reductionist analysis of the multiple elements that in combination induce autoimmunity in humans.
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PMID:Experimental autoimmune gastritis: mouse models of human organ-specific autoimmune disease. 1576 91

Helicobacter pylori infection is the major cause of gastroduodenal pathologies, but only a minority of infected patients develop chronic and life threatening diseases, as peptic ulcer, gastric cancer, B-cell lymphoma, or autoimmune gastritis. The type of host immune response against H. pylori is crucial for the outcome of the infection. A predominant H. pylori-specific Th1 response, characterized by high IFN-gamma, TNF-alpha, and IL-12 production associates with peptic ulcer, whereas combined secretion of both Th1 and Th2 cytokines are present in uncomplicated gastritis. Gastric T cells from MALT lymphoma exhibit abnormal help for autologous B-cell proliferation and reduced perforin- and Fas-Fas ligand-mediated killing of B cells. In H. pylori-infected patients with autoimmune gastritis cytolytic T cells infiltrating the gastric mucosa cross-recognize different epitopes of H. pylori proteins and H+K+ ATPase autoantigen. These data suggest that peptic ulcer can be regarded as a Th1-driven immunopathological response to some H. pylori antigens, whereas deregulated and exhaustive H. pylori-induced T cell-dependent B-cell activation can support the onset of low-grade B-cell lymphoma. Alternatively, H. pylori infection may lead in some individuals to gastric autoimmunity via molecular mimicry.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori, T cells and cytokines: the "dangerous liaisons". 1586 4

Autoimmune gastritis (AIG) is an experimental model that closely resembles human autoimmune gastritis, the underlying pathology of pernicious anemia. Pathogenic CD4+ T cells are reactive to the parietal cell autoantigen, H/K ATPase, and are controlled by CD4+CD25+ T cells in an immunosuppressive cytokine-independent manner. Comparison of CD4+CD25+ T cell-mediated suppression in other autoimmune models shows inconsistencies with respect to requirements of cytokines for immunosuppression. More recent data, however, indicate that the evidence for requirement of IL-10 and TGF-beta could be due to the complex nature of the T cells causing the disease as well as the role of induced regulatory T cell populations. AIG provides a well-defined model that may allow for better analysis of CD4+CD25+ T cell in vivo biology. Evidence from this model indicates that immune responses must be initiated and then CD4+CD25+ T cells are recruited to control the quality of the immune response.
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PMID:Autoimmune gastritis is a well-defined autoimmune disease model for the study of CD4+CD25+ T cell-mediated suppression. 1598 80

"Promiscuous" thymic expression of peripheral autoantigens can contribute to immunological tolerance in some cases. However, in this study we show that thymic mRNA expression alone cannot predict a contribution to thymic tolerance. Autoimmune gastritis is caused by CD4+ T cells directed to the alpha (H/Kalpha) and beta (H/Kbeta) subunits of the gastric membrane protein the H+/K+ ATPase. H/Kalpha mRNA is expressed in the thymus, but H/Kbeta expression is barely detectable. In this study, we demonstrate that thymic H/Kalpha in wild-type mice or mice that overexpressed H/Kalpha did not result in negative selection of pathogenic anti-H/Kalpha T cells. However, negative selection of anti-H/Kalpha T cells did occur if H/Kbeta was artificially overexpressed in the thymus. Given that H/Kalpha cannot be exported from the endoplasmic reticulum and is rapidly degraded in the absence of H/Kbeta, we conclude that H/Kalpha epitopes are unable to access MHC class II loading compartments in cells of the normal thymus. This work, taken together with our previous studies, highlights that thymic autoantigen expression does not necessarily result in the induction of tolerance.
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PMID:Promiscuous thymic expression of an autoantigen gene does not result in negative selection of pathogenic T cells. 1623 67

A cardinal feature of organ-specific autoimmunity is destructive pathology in the target organ. In human and experimental models of autoimmune gastritis, mononuclear cell infiltration and cellular destruction in the gastric mucosa are disease hallmarks. Strategies to cure autoimmune disease must not only establish immunological tolerance to autoantigen, but also rid the organ of pathogenic autoreactive cells. The present study has assessed the effect of prednisolone treatment in clearing the inflammatory infiltrate in experimental autoimmune gastritis and in preventing disease relapse in athymic compared with euthymic mice. Experimental autoimmune gastritis was induced by neonatal thymectomy or by transgenic expression of GM-CSF (PC-GMCSF mice). Groups of mice were treated with prednisolone (10 mg/kg per day) for 10 weeks or with prednisolone for 10 weeks followed by 10 weeks without prednisolone. Stomachs were examined for gross morphological changes, and by histology and immunohistochemistry for composition of inflammatory infiltrate and gastric mucosal integrity. Autoantibody to gastric H+/K+ ATPase was determined by ELISA. Prednisolone promoted remission of gastritis in both mouse models of experimental autoimmune gastritis, evident by reduction in stomach size, clearing of gastric inflammatory infiltrate, and regeneration of the gastric mucosa. Prednisolone withdrawal resulted in disease relapse in all PC-GMCSF mice, whereas approximately 40% of neonatal thymectomy mice retained normal stomach morphology and remained free of gastric pathology. It is concluded that prednisolone promotes remission and gastric mucosal regeneration in experimental autoimmune gastritis. Prolonged remission of autoimmune gastritis in some athymic mice suggests a role for the thymus in disease relapse.
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PMID:Prednisolone promotes remission and gastric mucosal regeneration in experimental autoimmune gastritis. 1671 Aug 33

Researchers have developed murine lymphopenic, non-lymphopenic, transgenic, spontaneous and infectious agent based models to induce an experimental autoimmune gastritis (EAG) for the study of human organ-specific autoimmune disease. These models result in a chronic inflammatory mononuclear cell infiltrate in the gastric mucosa, destruction of parietal and zymogenic cells with autoantibodies reactive to the gastric parietal cells and the gastric H+/K+ ATPase (ATP4), arguably hallmarks of a human autoimmune gastritis (AIG). In the case of AIG, it is well documented that, in addition to parietal cell antibodies being detected in up to 90% of patients, up to 70% have intrinsic factor antibodies with the later antibodies considered highly specific to patients with pernicious anemia. This is the first report specifically investigating the occurrence of intrinsic factor antibodies, cobalamin deficiency and pernicious anemia in EAG models. We conclude, in contrast to AIG, that, in the three EAG models examined, intrinsic factor is not selected as a critical autoantigen.
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PMID:Murine experimental autoimmune gastritis models refractive to development of intrinsic factor autoantibodies, cobalamin deficiency and pernicious anemia. 1703 94

Autoimmune atrophic gastritis is encountered in 20-27% of patients with obscure, or refractory iron deficiency anemia and is 4 to 6 times more common than celiac disease causing unexplained iron deficiency. The unique clinical features of iron deficiency anemia associated with achlorhydria and mucosal atrophy sparing the gastric antrum have all been accurately described by Faber and others over 100 years ago, including its refractoriness to oral iron treatment, female predominance, relatively young age, increased prevalence of thyroid disease and tendency to progress to pernicious anemia. A significant new development is the relation between autoimmune gastritis and Helicobacter pylori infection. H. pylori per se impairs gastric acid secretion and it is quite likely that a proportion of patients described originally as achylia gastrica represented H. pylori and not autoimmune gastritis. The demonstration of H. pylori antibodies in atrophic gastritis directed against epitopes on gastric mucosal cells implies an autoimmune mechanism triggered by H. pylori and directed against gastric parietal cells by antigenic mimicry of H+K+-ATPase, the most common autoantigen in pernicious anemia. These findings introduce a new element into the 100-year-old saga of achylia gastrica and open new options for its prevention and management.
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PMID:The anemia of achylia gastrica revisited. 1749 46

Several strategies are being designed to test the therapeutic potential of Ag-specific regulatory T cells to prevent or treat autoimmune diseases. In this study, we demonstrate that naive CD4+ Foxp3- T cells specific for a naturally expressed autoantigen (H+/K+ ATPase) can be converted to Foxp3+ T regulatory cells (Tregs) when stimulated in presence of TGFbeta. TGFbeta-induced Tregs (iTregs) have all the characteristics of naturally generated regulatory T cells in vitro, and more importantly, are effective at preventing organ-specific autoimmunity in a murine model of autoimmune gastritis. H+/K+ ATPase specific iTregs were able to inhibit the initial priming and proliferation of autoreactive T cells, and appear to do so by acting on H+/K+ ATPase presenting dendritic cells (DC). DC exposed to iTregs in vivo were reduced in their ability to stimulate proliferation and cytokine production by H+/K+ ATPase specific T cells. iTregs specifically reduced CD80 and CD86 expression on the surface of H+/K+ ATPase presenting DC in vitro. These studies reveal the therapeutic potential of Ag specific iTregs to prevent autoimmunity, and provide a mechanism by which this population of regulatory T cells, and perhaps others, mediate their suppressive effects in vivo.
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PMID:Autoantigen-specific TGFbeta-induced Foxp3+ regulatory T cells prevent autoimmunity by inhibiting dendritic cells from activating autoreactive T cells. 1787 67

Helicobacter pylori infection is the major cause of gastroduodenal pathologies, but only a minority of infected patients develop gastric B-cell lymphoma, gastric autoimmunity, or other life threatening diseases, as gastric cancer or peptic ulcer. The type of host immune response against H. pylori, particularly the cytolytic effector functions of T cells, is crucial for the outcome of the infection. T cells are potentially able to kill a target via different mechanisms, such as perforins or Fas-Fas ligand interaction. In H. pylori-infected patients with gastric autoimmunity cytolytic T cells, that cross-recognize different epitopes of H. pylori proteins and H(+)K(+)-ATPase autoantigen, infiltrate the gastric mucosa and lead to gastric atrophy via long-lasting activation of Fas ligand-mediated appotosis and perforin-induced cytotoxicity. On the other hand, gastric T cells from MALT lymphoma exhibit defective perforin- and Fas-Fas ligand-mediated killing of B cells, with consequent abnormal help for B-cell proliferation, suggesting that deregulated and exhaustive H. pylori-induced T cell-dependent B-cell activation can support both the onset and the promotion of low-grade B-cell lymphoma.
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PMID:Cytotoxic T cells in H. pylori-related gastric autoimmunity and gastric lymphoma. 2061 32

The AAA (ATPase-associated with various cellular activities) ATPase p97 acts on diverse substrate proteins to partake in various cellular processes such as membrane fusion and endoplasmic reticulum-associated degradation (ERAD). In membrane fusion, p97 is thought to function in analogy to the related ATPase NSF (N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion protein), which promotes membrane fusion by disassembling a SNARE complex. In ERAD, p97 dislocates misfolded proteins from the ER membrane to facilitate their turnover by the proteasome. Here, we identify a novel function of p97 in endocytic trafficking by establishing the early endosomal autoantigen 1 (EEA1) as a new p97 substrate. We demonstrate that a fraction of p97 is localized to the early endosome membrane, where it binds EEA1 via the N-terminal C2H2 zinc finger domain. Inhibition of p97 either by siRNA or a pharmacological inhibitor results in clustering and enlargement of early endosomes, which is associated with an altered trafficking pattern for an endocytic cargo. Mechanistically, we show that p97 inhibition causes increased EEA1 self-association at the endosome membrane. We propose that p97 may regulate the size of early endosomes by governing the oligomeric state of EEA1.
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PMID:The p97 ATPase associates with EEA1 to regulate the size of early endosomes. 2155 36


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