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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:6.3.4.6 (
urease
)
7,490
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The objective of these experiments was to examine the ability of Helicobacter pylori to stimulate
interleukin-10
(
IL-10
) or IL-12 and select for either Th1 or Th2 cells. Gastric biopsy specimens were collected from patients who were categorized with respect to the presence of H. pylori and gastric disease as well as their age, gender, medications, and other factors. As Th1 and Th2 cells are selected by IL-12 and
IL-10
, respectively, biopsy specimens were screened for mRNA and protein for these cytokines. Although mRNA for IL-12 and
IL-10
was detected in biopsy specimens obtained from both infected and uninfected patients, IL-12 protein predominated. Levels of
IL-10
and IL-12 in gastric tissue did not change in response to infection. Moreover, gamma interferon (IFN-gamma)-producing T cells were found in both the infected and the uninfected gastric mucosa. Stimulation of peripheral blood leukocytes from either infected or uninfected donors with various concentrations of live or killed H. pylori induced immunoreactive IL-12 and
IL-10
. After stimulation with live H. pylori, IL-12 levels increased more than 30-fold, whereas
IL-10
levels increased only 2- to 5-fold, compared to cells stimulated with medium alone. Interestingly, killed H. pylori induced significantly more
IL-10
(P < 0.05) than live H. pylori, while recombinant
urease
only induced
IL-10
. These results demonstrate that live H. pylori selectively stimulates the induction of IL-12 and Th1 cells that produce IFN-gamma, whereas preparations used in oral vaccines induce more
IL-10
and may favor Th2 cell responses.
...
PMID:Differential stimulation of interleukin-12 (IL-12) and IL-10 by live and killed Helicobacter pylori in vitro and association of IL-12 production with gamma interferon-producing T cells in the human gastric mucosa. 931 31
A spiral-shaped bacterium with bipolar, single-sheathed flagella was isolated from the intestines of IL-10 (
interleukin-10
)-deficient (IL-10(-/-)) mice with inflammatory bowel disease. The organism was microaerobic, grew at 37 and 42 degrees C, and was oxidase and catalase positive but
urease
negative. On the basis of 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis and biochemical and phenotypic criteria, the organism is classified as a novel helicobacter. Cesarean section-rederived IL-10(-/-) mice without helicobacter infection did not have histological evidence of intestinal inflammation. However, helicobacter-free IL-10(-/-), SCID/NCr, and A/JNCr mice experimentally inoculated with the novel
urease
-negative Helicobacter sp. developed variable degrees of inflammation in the lower intestine, and in immunocompetent mice, the experimental infection was accompanied by a corresponding elevated immunoglobulin G antibody response to the novel Helicobacter sp. antigen. These data support other recent studies which demonstrate that multiple Helicobacter spp. in both naturally and experimentally infected mice can induce inflammatory bowel disease. The mouse model of helicobacter-associated intestinal inflammation should prove valuable in understanding how specific microbial antigens influence a complex disease process.
...
PMID:A novel urease-negative Helicobacter species associated with colitis and typhlitis in IL-10-deficient mice. 1008 15
It is well known that abnormal immune responses may play a pathogenic role in the H. pylori-related gastropathy. Indeed, as far as humoral immune response is concerned, it is still debated whether specific anti-H. pylori antibodies have a protective or noxious effect in infected hosts. Besides proinflammatory cytokines released from macrophages, such as tumor-necrosis factor-a and interleukin-1beta, and IFN-gamma derived from T-helper 1 lymphocytes, also
interleukin-10
, a product of T-helper 2 lymphocytes with antiinflammatory properties, seems to be surprisingly involved in the pathogenesis of H. pylori-induced gastritis. In addition, lipopolysaccharide derived from the outher membrane of H. pylori acts as a chemoattractant for monocytes and induces release of free radicals, interleukin-1beta, interleukin-6, interleukin-8 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha. On the other hand, H. pylori lipopolysaccharide could be responsible for the increased polyamine concentrations in the gastric mucosa and polyamines, such as putrescine, spermidine and spermine, could be involved in the increased cell proliferation and consequent possible neoplastic transformation of the gastric mucosa. Incubation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells with H. pylori increases significantly the surface expression of CD95 receptor (Fas), thus suggesting that these bacteria are able to induce apoptosis. In animal models, different types of vaccination have been investigated, including stimulation of nasal and rectal lymphoid tissue, as well as adoptive transfer of T cell from donors immunized with H. pylori. However, results obtained are frequently disappointing. In humans,
urease
of H. pylori was safely used as oral vaccine in the absence or presence of adjuvants with encouraging results. Finally, DNA vaccines could offer in the future advantages for prophylactic H. pylori eradication, especially where population is infected by this microorganism since childhood.
...
PMID:Helicobacter pylori infection, immune response and vaccination. 1247 86
Infection with Helicobacter trogontum, a
urease
-positive helicobacter isolated from subclinically infected rats, was evaluated in B6.129P2-IL10(tm1Cgn) (
interleukin-10
(-/-) [IL-10(-/-)]) and C57BL/6 (B6) mice. In a first experiment, IL-10(-/-) mice naturally infected with Helicobacter rodentium had subclinical typhlocolitis but developed severe diarrhea and loss of body condition with erosive to ulcerative typhlocolitis within 1 to 3 weeks of experimental infection with H. trogontum. A second experiment demonstrated that helicobacter-free IL-10(-/-) mice dosed with H. trogontum also developed severe clinical signs and typhlocolitis within 2 to 4 weeks, whereas B6 mice colonized with H. trogontum were resistant to disease. In a third experiment, using helicobacter-free IL-10(-/-) mice, dosing with H. trogontum resulted in acute morbidity and typhlocolitis within 8 days. Acute typhlocolitis was accompanied by signs of sepsis supported by degenerative hemograms and recovery of Escherichia coli and Proteus spp. from the livers of infected mice. Quantitative PCR data revealed that H. rodentium and H. trogontum may compete for colonization of the lower bowel, as H. trogontum established higher colonization levels in the absence of H. rodentium (P < 0.003). H. trogontum-induced typhlocolitis was also associated with a significant decrease in the levels of colonization by five of eight anaerobes that comprise altered Schaedler's flora (P < 0.002). These results demonstrate for the first time that H. rodentium infection in IL-10(-/-) mice causes subclinical typhlocolitis and that infection with H. trogontum (with or without H. rodentium) induces a rapid-onset, erosive to ulcerative typhlocolitis which impacts the normal anaerobic flora of the colon and increases the risk of sepsis.
...
PMID:Rapid onset of ulcerative typhlocolitis in B6.129P2-IL10tm1Cgn (IL-10-/-) mice infected with Helicobacter trogontum is associated with decreased colonization by altered Schaedler's flora. 1698 22