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Helicobacter pylori vacuolating toxin accumulates within the endosomal-vacuolar compartment of cultured gastric cells and potentiates the vacuolating activity of ammonia

Authors :
Marco Romano
Patrizia Sommi
Roberto Fiocca
Ulderico Ventura
Enrico Solcia
Vittorio Ricci
Source :
The Journal of Pathology. 183:453-459
Publication Year :
1997
Publisher :
Wiley, 1997.

Abstract

This study explored the relationship between vacuolating toxin and ammonia in the genesis of Helicobacter pylori-induced vacuolation in cultured human gastric cells and investigated the intracellular sites of toxin accumulation. Neutral red dye uptake and electron microscopy were used in the investigation of the respective roles of, and of the reciprocal interaction between, toxin and ammonia in cell vacuolation and ultrastructural immunocytochemistry was used for the identification of the intracellular sites of internalized toxin. Toxin was found to cause an expansion of the endosomal compartment, where it accumulates after cellular internalization. However, toxin does not form large, neutral red-positive vacuoles unless combined with ammonia, whose moderate vacuolating activity is markedly potentiated by the toxin. It is concluded that the toxin accumulated within the endosomal compartment alters the morphology and function of this organelle and plays a permissive role towards cell vacuolation, possibly by increasing the accumulation of protonated ammonia within endosomes. In turn, ammonia induces excessive dilatation of the endosomes with reciprocal fusion of their membranes, thus causing cytoplasmic vacuolation.

Details

ISSN :
10969896 and 00223417
Volume :
183
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....049e00f37460fdb7e9c7add01adbe1e4