Metabolomics,Unknown,Transcriptomics,Genomics,Proteomics

Dataset Information

0

Comparative genomic hybridization of single colony purified H. pylori adhesin phenotyped isolates obtained from 25 cases and 71 controls in a Swedish case-control study of gastric cancer


ABSTRACT: Helicobacter pylori enhances the risk for ulcer disease and gastric cancer, yet only a minority of H. pylori-colonized individuals develop disease. We examined the ability of two H. pylori isolates to induce differential host responses in vivo or in vitro, and then used an H. pylori whole genome microarray to identify bacterial determinants related to pathogenesis. Gastric ulcer strain B128 induced more severe gastritis, proliferation, and apoptosis in gerbil mucosa than did duodenal ulcer strain G1.1, and gastric ulceration and atrophy occurred only in B128+ gerbils. In vitro, gerbil-passaged B128 derivatives significantly increased IL-8 secretion and apoptosis compared with G1.1 strains. DNA hybridization to the microarray identified several strain-specific differences in gene composition including a large deletion of the cag pathogenicity island in strain G1.1. Partial and complete disruption of the cag island in strain B128 attenuated induction of IL-8 in vitro and significantly decreased gastric inflammation in vivo. These results indicate that the ability of H. pylori to regulate epithelial cell responses related to inflammation depends on the presence of an intact cag pathogenicity island. Use of an H pylori whole genome microarray is an effective method to identify differences in gene content between H. pylori strains that induce distinct pathological outcomes in a rodent model of H. pylori infection.

ORGANISM(S): Helicobacter pylori

SUBMITTER: Nina Salama 

PROVIDER: E-SMDB-1587 | biostudies-arrayexpress |

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-arrayexpress

altmetric image

Publications

Helicobacter pylori strain-specific differences in genetic content, identified by microarray, influence host inflammatory responses.

Israel D A DA   Salama N N   Arnold C N CN   Moss S F SF   Ando T T   Wirth H P HP   Tham K T KT   Camorlinga M M   Blaser M J MJ   Falkow S S   Peek R M RM  

The Journal of clinical investigation 20010301 5


Helicobacter pylori enhances the risk for ulcer disease and gastric cancer, yet only a minority of H. pylori-colonized individuals develop disease. We examined the ability of two H. pylori isolates to induce differential host responses in vivo or in vitro, and then used an H. pylori whole genome microarray to identify bacterial determinants related to pathogenesis. Gastric ulcer strain B128 induced more severe gastritis, proliferation, and apoptosis in gerbil mucosa than did duodenal ulcer strai  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

2005-08-16 | E-GEOD-3135 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2005-08-16 | GSE3135 | GEO
2010-11-13 | E-GEOD-21833 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2010-11-13 | GSE21833 | GEO
2013-11-10 | E-GEOD-32107 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2014-08-23 | E-GEOD-60661 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2014-08-18 | E-GEOD-47797 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2014-08-23 | E-GEOD-60662 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2013-11-10 | GSE32107 | GEO
2014-08-23 | GSE60661 | GEO