Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P10145 (IL-8)
23,849 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Nitric oxide produced by inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) has been claimed to be involved in gastritis; however, its characteristics are largely unknown. We assessed (1) iNOS expression in the human gastric mucosa in chronic gastritis and (2) the cytokines associated with iNOS expression. Gastric biopsy specimens were obtained from patients with chronic gastritis. Total RNA was isolated and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed semiquantitatively using specific primer sets for iNOS, interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-8, IL-6, interferon-y, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), TNF receptors, IL-6 receptors, and sucrase, respectively. Helicobacter pylori infection was examined by the PCR assay. Reverse transcription-PCR analysis showed that expression of iNOS was detected in 10 of 23 samples. Expression of iNOS mRNA was closely correlated with expression of TNF-alpha and was observed frequently in subjects with intestinal metaplasia. The Helicobacter pylori gene was detected by PCR assay in all iNOS-positive cases. These results indicate that iNOS is predominantly expressed in the gastric mucosa with intestinal metaplasia and H. pylori infection. TNF-alpha is thought to be an important cytokine associated with iNOS expression.
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PMID:Enhanced expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase in chronic gastritis with intestinal metaplasia. 980 53

The host immune response to Helicobacter pylori infection might be of importance with regard to the outcome of infection by this organism, e.g., to explain why only a proportion of infected subjects develop peptic ulcers. In this study we have analyzed the local response of different cytokines-i.e., the proinflammatory interleukin-1beta, (IL-1beta), IL-6, tumor necrosis factor alpha, and IL-8; the immunoregulatory gamma interferon (IFN-gamma); and IL-4; and the anti-inflammatory transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta)-in antral biopsy specimens from H. pylori-infected duodenal ulcer (DU) patients and asymptomatic (AS) carriers (i.e., with chronic gastritis only). For comparison, biopsy specimens from uninfected healthy individuals were also analyzed. An immunohistochemical technique was used to allow quantification of the cytokine responses as well as identification of the cell types associated with the cytokine expression. We found that the levels of all of the studied cytokines except IL-4 were increased in the H. pylori-infected subjects compared to the levels in the healthy individuals. Our results indicate that the antral cytokine response is of the Th1 type since IFN-gamma, but not IL-4, was up-regulated both in H. pylori-infected DU patients and in AS carriers. However, there were no significant differences in either proinflammatory or immunoregulatory cytokine levels when H. pylori-infected subjects with and without peptic ulcers were compared. Some of the cytokines, particularly IL-1beta and TGF-beta, were also found in the gastric mucosae of healthy, uninfected subjects. We also showed that the gastric epithelium contributes substantially to the antral cytokine response of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-1beta and IL-6 in addition to IL-8.
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PMID:Local cytokine response in Helicobacter pylori-infected subjects. 982 79

Helicobacter pylori has been widely recognized as an important human pathogen responsible for chronic gastritis, peptic ulcers, gastric cancer, and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma. Little is known about the natural history of this infection since patients are usually recognized as having the infection only after years or decades of chronic disease. Several animal models of H. pylori infection, including those with different species of rodents, nonhuman primates, and germ-free animals, have been developed. Here we describe a new animal model in which the clinical, pathological, microbiological, and immunological aspects of human acute and chronic infection are mimicked and which allows us to monitor these aspects of infection within the same individuals. Conventional Beagle dogs were infected orally with a mouse-adapted strain of H. pylori and monitored for up to 24 weeks. Acute infection caused vomiting and diarrhea. The acute phase was followed by polymorphonuclear cell infiltration, interleukin 8 induction, mononuclear cell recruitment, and the appearance of a specific antibody response against H. pylori. The chronic phase was characterized by gastritis, epithelial alterations, superficial erosions, and the appearance of the typical macroscopic follicles that in humans are considered possible precursors of MALT lymphoma. In conclusion, infection in this model mimics closely human infection and allows us to study those phases that cannot be studied in humans. This new model can be a unique tool for learning more about the disease and for developing strategies for treatment and prevention.
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PMID:A conventional beagle dog model for acute and chronic infection with Helicobacter pylori. 1033 28

Increased production of proinflammatory cytokines, including tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), IL-1beta, IL-6 and IL-8, has been demonstrated in Helicobacter pylori-associated gastric mucosal inflammation. IL-12, a newly characterized cytokine, is thought to be a key mediator in host responses to bacterial infections. The aim of this study was to investigate differences in cytokine patterns between H. pylori-positive and -negative gastritis and normal mucosa. Secretion of IL-12, TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, IL-6, IL-8 and IL-10 was measured in 176 patients with chronic gastritis in whole biopsy cultures. Gastritis was graded for chronic inflammation or acute inflammatory activity, respectively, according to the Sydney system. Biopsies with similar scores were matched for analysis from H. pylori-infected and non-infected patients. Secretion of IL-12 was significantly increased in H. pylori-associated gastritis in comparison with H. pylori-negative gastritis (P < 0.0001). In contrast, secretion of TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, IL-6, and IL-8 correlated with the degree of inflammation but was not different between H. pylori-positive and -negative patients. Moreover, IL-10 secretion was found to be higher in H. pylori-positive than in H. pylori-negative patients. IL-12 may play a specific role in H. pylori-associated gastric disease, whereas production of the proinflammatory cytokines TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, IL-6 and IL-8 does not seem to be restricted to H. pylori-induced inflammation. The contra-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 may be a contributor to the chronicity of H. pylori-associated gastritis by impairing clearance of the pathogen.
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PMID:Production of IL-12 in gastritis relates to infection with Helicobacter pylori. 1044 64

We attempted to evaluate the relationship between the expression of IL-8 and RANTES and the dynamics of their target cells in human gastric mucosa of H. pylori associated gastritis, including their changes after H. pylori eradication. We performed the measurement of the mucosal level of IL-8 and RANTES protein by ELISA and immunohistochemistry. The neutrophil infiltration into the gastric mucosa was identified by the histological examination based on the Updated Sydney system and the measurement of MPO activity. The memory T lymphocyte and eosinophil were indicated by immunohistochemistry of CD45RO that is one of surface markers indicating memory T lymphocytes and MBP that is contained in the granules of eosinophils. H. pylori positive gastric mucosa demonstrated a remarkable increase in neutrophils. CD45RO positive cells and eosinophils, compared to H. pylori negative gastric mucosa. Gastric mucosal level of IL-8 and RANTES protein and MPO activity was significantly higher in H. pylori positive cases than that in H. pylori negative controls after H. pylori eradication, both of the level of IL-8 protein and MPO activity reduced at the same levels as negative controls. However, RANTES expression, CD45RO positive T lymphocytes and eosinophils remained in H. pylori eradicated gastric mucosa at the significantly high level, compared with H. pylori negative cases. Therefore, it seems possible that IL-8 might enhance the inflammation by facilitating the neutrophil infiltration into H. pylori infected gastric mucosa and that RANTES might play an important role in the specific immune response against H. pylori and the maintenance of the immune memory after H. pylori eradication.
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PMID:[The expression of chemokines and the dynamics of inflammatory cell infiltration before and after H. pylori eradication]. 1048 81

The aim of this study was to examine the relation between disease specificity and the virulence factors of Helicobacter pylori isolated from patients with gastric cancer (GC), duodenal ulcer (DU), and gastritis (GS). Altogether 18 isolates obtained from patients with GC, 28 isolates from DU patients, and 13 isolates from GS patients were analyzed. All isolates were tested for the presence of the cagA gene, and genotyping of the vacA gene was done by the polymerase chain reaction. Production of VacA protein and expression of vacuolating cytotoxic activity in the H. pylori culture supernatant were examined. The serum antibody titers against purified VacA and CagA proteins were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Interleukin-8 (IL-8) production by AGS cells in response to H. pylori isolates was measured by an hIL-8 ELISA kit. Genetic analysis of vacA revealed that most of the clinical isolates were classified into the S1a type by signal sequence typing. There were no differences in cagA detection rates, vacuolating cytotoxin activity, or mean antibody titers against VacA and CagA protein among the three groups. The mean IL-8 concentrations in the supernatants of AGS cells were similar in the three groups. In this study, there was no difference in virulence factors of H. pylori among isolates from GC, DU, and GS.
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PMID:Divergence of virulence factors of Helicobacter pylori among clinical isolates does not correlate with disease specificity. 1061 58

Rosacea is a common condition of unknown etiology usually accompanied by gastrointestinal symptoms and favorably responding to the treatment with antibiotics. This study was designed to examine the prevalence of gastric Helicobacter pylori (Hp) infection verified by 13C-UTB-test, CLO, Hp culture and serology (IgG) in patients with rosacea. Gastroduodenoscopy was combined with pentagastrin secretory test and antral and fundic biopsy samples were taken for histological evaluation (the Sydney system). Blood samples were also taken for the determination of plasma gastrin using RIA and plasma interleukin (IL)-8 and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) using ELISA. This study was performed in 60 patients, 31-72 year old, with visible papules and pustules associated with erythema and flushing on the face and on 60 age- and gender-matched patients without any skin diseases but with similar as in rosacea gastrointestinal symptoms but without endoscopic changes in gastroduodenal mucosa (non-ulcer dyspepsia - NUD). The Hp prevalence in rosacea patients was about 88 % as compared to 65% in control NUD patients. Among rosacea patients, 67% were cytotoxin associated gene A (CagA) positive, while in NUD patients only 32% were CagA positive. Rosacea patients showed gastritis with activity of about 2.1 in antrum and 0.9 in the corpus of the stomach while those with NUD only mild gastritis with activity of approximately 1.0) confined to the antrum only. Following initial examination, typical 1 wk anti-Hp therapy including omeprazole (20 mg bd.), clarithromycin (500 mg bd.) and metronidazol (500 mg bd.) was carried out. After eradication, 51 out of 53 treated rosacea patients became Hp negative. Within 2-4 weeks, the symptoms of rosacea disappeared in 51 patients, markedly declined in 1 and remained unchanged in 1 other subject. A dramatic reduction in activity of gastritis (to 0.3 in antrum and to 0.1 in corpus) was observed. Basal plasma gastrin decreased from 48 +/- 5 pM before to 17+/-3 pM after eradication, while pentagastrin-induced maximal (MAO) declined, respectively, from about 16.6 +/- 4.2 to 8.5 +/- 1.8 mmol/h. Plasma TNFalpha and IL-8 were reduced after the therapy by 72% and 65%, respectively. We conclude that: 1) Rosacea is a disorder with various gastrointestinal symptoms closely related to gastritis, especially involving the antrum mucosa, with Hp expressing cagA in the majority of cases and elevated plasma levels of TNFalpha and IL-8; 2) The eradication of Hp leads to a dramatic improvement of symptoms of rosacea and reduction in related gastrointestinal symptoms, gastritis, hypergastrinemia and gastric acid secretion; and 3) Rosacea could be considered as one of the major extragastric symptoms of Hp infection probably mediated by Hp-related cytotoxins and cytokines.
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PMID:Helicobacter pylori and its eradication in rosacea. 1069 58

A number of putative virulence factors for Helicobacter pylori have been identified including cagA, vacA and iceA. The criteria for a true virulence factor includes meeting the tests of biologically plausibility with the associations being both experimentally and epidemiologically consistent. Although disease-specific associations have been hypothesized/claimed, there are now sufficient data to conclusively state that none of these putative virulence factors have disease specificity. CagA has been claimed to be associated with increased mucosal IL-8 and inflammation, increased density of H. pylori in the antrum, duodenal ulcer (DU), gastric cancer, and protection against Barrett's cancer. Only the increase in IL-8/inflammation is direct and substantiated. Different H. pylori strains with functional cag pathogenicity islands do not vary in virulance as it has been shown that mucosal IL-8 levels are proportional to the number of cagA + H. pylori independent of the disease from which the H. pylori were obtained. It is now known that the density of either cagA + and cagA-H. pylori in the antrum of patients with H. pylori gastritis is the same. In contrast, the mean density of H. pylori in the antrum in DU is greater than in the antrum of patients with H. pylori gastritis. Of interest, the density of H. pylori is higher in the corpus of patients with H. pylori gastritis than those with DU, suggesting that acid secretion plays a critical role in these phenomena. The presence of a functional cag pathogenicity island increases inflammation and it is likely that any factor that results in an increase in inflammation also increases the risk of a symptomatic outcome. Nevertheless, the presence of a functional cag pathogenicity island has no predictive value for the presence, or the future development of a clinically significant outcome. The hypothesis that iceA has disease specificity has not been confirmed and there is currently no known biological or epidemiological evidence for a role for iceA as a virulence factor in H. pylori-related disease. The claim that vacA genotyping might prove clinically useful, e.g. to predict presentation such as duodenal ulcer, has been proven wrong. Analysis of the worldwide data show that vacA genotype s1 is actually a surrogate for the cag pathogenicity island. There is now evidence to suggest that virulence is a host-dependent factor. The pattern of gastritis has withstood the test of time for its relation to different H. pylori-related diseases (e.g. antral predominant gastritis with duodenal ulcer disease). The primary factors responsible for the different patterns of gastritis in response to an H. pylori infection are environmental (e.g. diet), with the H. pylori strain playing a lesser role. Future studies should work to eliminate potential bias before claiming disease associations. Controls must exclude regional or geographic associations related to the common strain circulation and not to the outcome. The authors must also control for both the presence of the factor and for the disease association. The study should be sufficiently large and employ different diseases and ethnic groups for the results to be robust. The findings in the initial sample (data derived hypothesis) should be tested in a new group (hypothesis testing), preferably from another area, before making claims. Finally, it is important to ask whether the results are actually a surrogate for another marker (e.g. vacA s1 for cagA) masquerading for a new finding. Only the cag pathogenicity island has passed the tests of biological plausibility (increased inflammation) and experimental and epidemiological consistency.
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PMID:Disease-specific Helicobacter pylori virulence factors: the unfulfilled promise. 1082 48

Helicobacter pylori (HP)-associated gastritis is characterized by an increased number of acute and chronic inflammatory cells secreting cytokines that contribute to maintain and expand the local inflammation. Locally induced IL-8 is believed to play a major role in the HP-associated acute inflammatory response. Factors/mechanisms that regulate IL-8 induction are, however, not fully understood. In the present study we investigated whether HP infection is associated with an increased production of IL-17, a T cell-derived cytokine capable of modulating IL-8 gene expression. We showed that both IL-17 RNA transcripts and protein were expressed at a higher level in the whole gastric mucosal and lamina propria mononuclear cell samples from HP-infected patients than in those from uninfected subjects. HP: eradication was associated with a marked down-regulation of IL-17 expression. The addition of a neutralizing anti-IL-17 Ab to the gastric lamina propria mononuclear cell cultures resulted in a significant inhibition of IL-8 secretion, indicating that IL-17 contributes to enhance IL-8 in the HP-colonized gastric mucosa. Consistently, stimulation of MKN 28 cells, a gastric epithelial cell line, with IL-17 increased IL-8 secretion. Finally, conditioned medium from the IL-17-stimulated MKN 28 cell cultures promoted the in vitro polymorphonuclear leukocyte migration. This effect was inhibitable by a neutralizing IL-8 but not IL-17 Ab. Together, these data indicate that biologically active IL-17 production is increased during HP: infection, suggesting the possibility that this cytokine may play an important role in the inflammatory response to the HP colonization.
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PMID:Up-regulation of IL-17 is associated with bioactive IL-8 expression in Helicobacter pylori-infected human gastric mucosa. 1104 68

Infection with Helicobacter pylori causes chronic active gastritis, which is characterized by neutrophils infiltrating the gastric epithelial layer and the underlying lamina propria as well as by T, B lymphocytes and macrophages accumulating in the lamina propria. In this study, the chemokine profile responsible for the recruitment of these inflammatory cells is investigated. Using both RNA/RNA in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry, the expression of the neutrophil and/or lymphocyte-attractant CXC chemokines growth-related oncogene alpha (Gro(alpha)), IL-8, interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma)-inducible protein-10 (IP-10), monokine induced by IFN-gamma (MIG) and the CC chemokines macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha), -1beta, regulated on activation normal T cell expressed and secreted (RANTES) and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) is studied and microanatomically localized in the gastric mucosa. Macrophages in the lamina propria at sites with neutrophil infiltration and gastric epithelium infiltrated by neutrophils highly expressed the neutrophil-attractant chemokines Gro(alpha) and IL-8. Additionally, Gro(alpha) and IL-8 were expressed by neutrophils themselves localized within gastric epithelium, in the foveolar lumen and in the cellular debris overlying mucosal erosion. IP-10 and to a lower extent MIG, both selectively chemotactic for inflammatory T cells, were expressed by endothelial cells of gastric mucosal vessels and by mononuclear cells at sites with T cell infiltration. Expression of all other CC chemokines tested was significantly lower. These in vivo data indicate that a set of predominantly CXC chemokines modulates the inflammation in H. pylori gastritis. Gro(alpha) and IL-8 may play an important role in neutrophil trafficking from the mucosal vessel into the gastric epithelium, whereas IP-10 and MIG contribute to the recruitment of inflammatory T cells into the mucosa.
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PMID:CXC chemokines Gro(alpha)/IL-8 and IP-10/MIG in Helicobacter pylori gastritis. 1109 Dec 74


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