4.7 Article

Mouse Gastric Epithelial Cells Resist CagA Delivery by the Helicobacter pylori Type IV Secretion System

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms23052492

Keywords

Helicobacter pylori; mouse gastric epithelial cells; CEACAM; CagA; HopQ

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [16H06373, 16K15273, 21H04804, 19K07535]
  2. Project for Cancer Research and Therapeutic Evolution (P-CREATE) from Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED) [160200000291]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19K07535, 16H06373, 21H04804] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The initial step in bacterial infection is the adherence of the bacterium to the target cell surface. This study found that the mouse stomach has a much lower expression level of Ceacam1 compared to the human stomach, which leads to the inability of the bacteria to deliver the CagA protein due to the lack of interaction between HopQ and Ceacam1 in mouse gastric epithelial cells.
The initial step in bacterial infection is adherence of the bacterium to the target cell surface. Helicobacter pylori exploits the interaction of bacterial adhesin protein HopQ with human epithelial CEACAMs (CEACAM1, 5, and 6) to stably adhere to gastric epithelial cells, which is necessary for delivery of the H. pylori CagA oncoprotein into the epithelial cells via a type IV secretion system. In contrast to human CEACAMs, however, HopQ does not interact with Ceacam1 (mouse CEACAM1) in vitro or in CHO cells ectopically expressing Ceacam1. Since the mouse genome lacks Ceacam5 and Ceacam6, no significant HopQ-Ceacam interaction may occur in mouse gastric epithelial cells. Here, we found that the mouse stomach has a much lower expression level of Ceacam1 than the expression level of CEACAM1 in the human stomach. Consistently, mouse gastric epithelial cells resist CagA delivery by cagA-positive H. pylori, and the delivery is restored by ectopic expression of human CEACAM1 or CEACAM5 in mouse gastric epithelial cells. Thus, despite the fact that mice are routinely used for H. pylori infection studies, a low expression level of Ceacam1 in the mouse stomach together with the loss or greatly reduced interaction of HopQ with Ceacams make the mouse an inappropriate model for studying the role of H. pylori-delivered CagA in gastric pathogenesis, including the development of gastric cancer.

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