期刊
INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
卷 81, 期 5, 页码 1382-1389出版社
AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00044-13
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资金
- National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) at the National Institutes of Health [AI050000]
- University of California Cancer Research Coordinating Committee
Helicobacter pylori infects over 3 billion people worldwide and is the primary risk factor for gastric cancer. Most individuals infected with H. pylori develop only asymptomatic gastritis; however, some develop ulcers or gastric adenocarcinoma. We demonstrate that one previously unappreciated parameter influencing H. pylori disease outcome is variation in the preinfection host microbiota. Utilizing a mouse model, we altered the microbiota by antibiotic treatment and found that these alterations resulted in significantly lowered H. pylori-triggered inflammation. Specifically, antibiotic pretreatment reduced CD4(+)T-helper cells and Ifn gamma transcript levels in gastric tissue after H. pylori infection. The bacterial communities in mice with a reduced response to H. pylori displayed many differences from those in untreated mice, including significantly more cluster IV and XIVa Clostridium spp., bacteria known to influence inflammation via regulatory T cell populations. Our findings suggest that microbiota composition, perhaps Clostridium spp., contributes to the variable disease outcome of H. pylori infection by altering the recruitment of CD4(+) T cells to the gastric compartment. Our results suggest that gastric microbiota could be used as a diagnostic tool to determine which patients are at risk for developing severe disease.
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