Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Query: UMLS:C0079731 (
B-cell lymphoma
)
16,671
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chronic infection
of the gastroduodenal mucosae by the gram-negative spiral bacterium Helicobacter pylori is responsible for chronic active gastritis, peptic ulcers, and gastric cancers such as adenocarcinoma and low-grade gastric
B-cell lymphoma
. The success of eradication by antibiotic therapy is being rapidly hampered by the increasing occurrence of antibiotic-resistant strains. An attractive alternative approach to combat this infection is represented by the therapeutic use of vaccines. In the present work, we have exploited the mouse model of persistent infection by mouse-adapted H. pylori strains that we have developed to assess the feasibility of the therapeutic use of vaccines against infection. We report that an otherwise chronic H. pylori infection in mice can be successfully eradicated by intragastric vaccination with H. pylori antigens such as recombinant VacA and CagA, which were administered together with a genetically detoxified mutant of the heat-labile enterotoxin of Escherichia coli (referred to as LTK63), in which the serine in position 63 was replaced by a lysine. Moreover, we show that therapeutic vaccination confers efficacious protection against reinfection. These results represent strong evidence of the feasibility of therapeutic use of VacA- or CagA-based vaccine formulations against H. pylori infection in an animal model and give substantial preclinical support to the application of this kind of approach in human clinical trials.
...
PMID:Therapeutic intragastric vaccination against Helicobacter pylori in mice eradicates an otherwise chronic infection and confers protection against reinfection. 939 88
Chronic infection
of the gastroduodenal mucosae by the gram-negative spiral bacterium Helicobacter pylori is responsible for chronic active gastritis, peptic ulcers, and gastric cancers such as adenocarcinoma and low-grade
B-cell lymphoma
. The success of eradication by antibiotic therapy is being rapidly hampered by the increasing occurrence of antibiotic-resistant strains. An attractive alternative approach to combat this infection is represented by the therapeutic use of vaccines. In the present work, we have exploited the mouse model of persistent infection by mouse-adapted H. pylori strains that we have developed to assess the feasibility of the therapeutic use of vaccines against infection. We report that an otherwise chronic H. pylori infection in mice can be successfully eradicated by intragastric vaccination with H. pylori antigens such as recombinant VacA and CagA, which were administered together with a genetically detoxified mutant of the heat-labile exterotoxin of Escherichia coli (referred to as LTK63), in which the serine in position 63 was replaced by a lysine. Moreover, we show that therapeutic vaccination confers efficacious protection against reinfection. These results represent strong evidence of the feasibility of therapeutic use of VacA- or CagA-based vaccine formulations against H. pylori infection in an animal model and give substantial preclinical support to the application of this kind of approach in human clinical trials.
...
PMID:Eradication of chronic Helicobacter pylori infection by therapeutic vaccination. 977 98
Chronic viral infection has been implicated in the pathogenesis of
B-cell lymphoma
, and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infects lymphocytes.
Chronic infection
with HCV may result in B-cell proliferation. Individuals infected with hepatitis C are often co-infected with the RNA virus GB virus type C. Studies from Europe where hepatitis C infection is more common than in North America have shown a high prevalence of hepatitis C infection in patients with
B-cell lymphoma
. The aim of this study was to establish the prevalence of HCV and GBV-C infection in patients with
B-cell lymphoma
in an area of low HCV prevalence. One hundred patients with
B-cell lymphoma
(10 high grade, 46 intermediate grade, and 44 low grade) and 100 controls with nonhematological malignancies were studied. Serum was analyzed for HCV antibodies by third generation enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay, and HCV RNA and GBV-C RNA was analyzed by reverse transcriptase PCR. None of the controls or lymphoma patients had antibodies to HCV. HCV RNA was undetected in 60 out of 100 lymphoma patients tested. GBV-C RNA was detected in the serum of 5 out of 100 (5%) of lymphoma patients and in 3 out of 100 (3%) controls. Hepatitis C and GBV-C are, therefore, unlikely to play a major role in the pathogenesis of
B-cell lymphoma
in North America.
...
PMID:No association between hepatitis C and B-cell lymphoma. 1049 Mar 76
Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) is a B-lymphotropic human herpesvirus that infects the vast majority of the world's population; it establishes lifelong latency in the infected host. The virus enters through the oropharyngeal mucus and replicates in epithelial cells. The infiltrating B lymphocytes become infected and normal resting B cells activated by the virus result in immortalised B cell populations. This growth program utilises all of the latent genes and proteins. Following primary infection, the virus is found in saliva for weeks and chronic shedding participates in transmitting the infection from person to person through intimate kissing contact. EBV causes infectious mononucleosis, leads to EBV-induced malignant
B-cell lymphoma
in immunosuppressed patients, and is implicated in the pathogenesis of several cancers in the immunocompetent. Laboratory confirmation of infectious mononucleosis employing serological testing is generally required.
Chronic infection
and reactivation however need additional investigations such as nucleic acids testing. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction is now used as the major marker in B-cell proliferations either for assessing risk factors or for evaluating the efficacy of anti-EBV treatments.
...
PMID:[Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)]. 1073 5
Chronic infection
with Plasmodium falciparum was epidemiologically associated with endemic Burkitt's lymphoma, a mature B cell cancer characterized by chromosome translocation between the c-myc oncogene and Igh, over 50 years ago. Whether infection promotes
B cell lymphoma
, and if so by which mechanism, remains unknown. To investigate the relationship between parasitic disease and lymphomagenesis, we used Plasmodium chabaudi (Pc) to produce chronic malaria infection in mice. Pc induces prolonged expansion of germinal centers (GCs), unique compartments in which B cells undergo rapid clonal expansion and express activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID), a DNA mutator. GC B cells elicited during Pc infection suffer widespread DNA damage, leading to chromosome translocations. Although infection does not change the overall rate, it modifies lymphomagenesis to favor mature B cell lymphomas that are AID dependent and show chromosome translocations. Thus, malaria infection favors mature B cell cancers by eliciting protracted AID expression in GC B cells. PAPERCLIP.
...
PMID:Plasmodium Infection Promotes Genomic Instability and AID-Dependent B Cell Lymphoma. 2629 39