1. Pathogenic properties of enterohepatic Helicobacter spp. isolated from rhesus macaques with intestinal adenocarcinoma
- Author
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Thomas W. Mitchell, James G. Fox, Kenneth E. Lodge, Kvin Lertpiriyapong, Yan Feng, Zeli Shen, Sureshkumar Muthupalani, Laurence Handt, and Floyd E. Dewhirst
- Subjects
Microbiology (medical) ,Male ,Inflammation ,In situ hybridization ,Adenocarcinoma ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Helicobacter Infections ,Cohort Studies ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Helicobacter ,Intestinal Neoplasms ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Helicobacter fennelliae ,biology ,Models of Infection ,Monkey Diseases ,General Medicine ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Macaca mulatta ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Phylogeography ,Immunology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Carcinogenesis - Abstract
Considerable progress has been made in understanding the roles of Helicobacter pylori in inflammation and gastric cancer; however, far less is known about the roles of enterohepatic Helicobacter species (EHS) in carcinogenesis and their zoonotic or pathogenic potential. We determined the prevalence of EHS infection in a cohort of geriatric rhesus monkeys in which intestinal adenocarcinoma (IAC) is common and investigated the association between EHS infection and IAC. The cohort consisted of 36 animals, 14 of which (age 26–35 years) had IAC. Of the 36 rhesus, 35 (97 %) were positive for EHS using PCR or bacterial isolation from faeces, colonic or tumour tissues. Only a single rhesus, which had IAC, was negative for EHS by all detection methods. The EHS identified by 16S rRNA sequencing in this study were from three Helicobacter taxa: Helicobacter macacae (previously rhesus monkey taxon 1), Helicobacter sp. rhesus monkey taxon 2, previously described from strain MIT 99-5507, and Helicobacter sp. rhesus monkey taxon 4, related to Helicobacter fennelliae. Thirteen of 14 monkeys with IAC were positive for either H. macacae (7/13, 54 %), EHS rhesus monkey taxon 4 (4/13, 31 %) or a mixture of the two EHS (2/13, 15 %). These results indicate that EHS are prevalent among aged rhesus macaques with IAC. Using Helicobacter genus-specific florescent in situ hybridization, EHS were detected on the surface of colonic epithelia of infected monkeys. All Helicobacter isolates, including H. macacae, effectively adhered to, invaded, and significantly induced proinflammatory genes, including IL-8, IL-6, TNF-α and iNOS, while downregulating genes involved in the function of inflammasomes, particularly IL-1β, CASPASE-1, NRLP3, NLRP6 and NLRC4 in the human colonic T84 cell line (P
- Published
- 2014