53 research outputs found

    A Combination of Sulindac and Antimicrobial Eradication of H. pylori Prevents Progression of Gastric Cancer in Hypergastrinemic INS-GAS Mice

    Get PDF
    Author Manuscript: 2010 October 15Helicobacter pylori infection causes severe dysplasia manifested as gastrointestinal intraepithelial neoplasia (GIN) after 28 weeks post–H. pylori infection (WPI) in cancer-prone, hypergastrinemic male INS-GAS mice. We examined the efficacy of the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug sulindac (400 ppm in drinking water) alone, the CCK2/gastrin receptor antagonist YM022 (45 mg/kg/wk) alone, and sulindac or YM022 combined with H. pylori eradication therapy to prevent H. pylori–associated gastric cancer in male INS-GAS mice. Treatments started at 22 WPI, and mice were euthanized at 28 WPI. In uninfected mice, all treatments significantly delayed development of spontaneous GIN (P < 0.05). In H. pylori–infected mice, sulindac alone or YM022 alone had no protective effect on H. pylori–associated GIN. Importantly, sulindac exacerbated the severity of H. pylori–associated gastritis despite decreased gastric prostaglandin E2 levels. However, sulindac combined with H. pylori antimicrobial eradication reduced the incidence of GIN (P < 0.05), whereas YM022 combined with antimicrobial eradication did not reduce GIN. In infected mice, sulindac or YM022 treatment did not alter gastric expression of the proinflammatory cytokines Ifn-γ and Tnf-α and mucosal cell proliferation. Sulindac or YM022 combined with antimicrobial eradication down-regulated mRNA levels of Ifn-γ and Tnf-α and mucosal cell proliferation (P < 0.05). We conclude that sulindac enhances H. pylori gastritis and may promote inflammation-mediated gastric carcinogenesis. The combination of sulindac and antimicrobial H. pylori eradication was beneficial for reducing proinflammatory cytokine mRNA in the stomach and preventing progression from severe dysplasia to gastric cancer in H. pylori–infected INS-GAS mice. [Cancer Res 2009;69(20):8166–74]National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01AI37750)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant P01CA26731)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant P30ES02109)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01CA093405-07A1

    Sequence-Based Analysis Uncovers an Abundance of Non-Coding RNA in the Total Transcriptome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

    Get PDF
    RNA sequencing provides a new perspective on the genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis by revealing an extensive presence of non-coding RNA, including long 5’ and 3’ untranslated regions, antisense transcripts, and intergenic small RNA (sRNA) molecules. More than a quarter of all sequence reads mapping outside of ribosomal RNA genes represent non-coding RNA, and the density of reads mapping to intergenic regions was more than two-fold higher than that mapping to annotated coding sequences. Selected sRNAs were found at increased abundance in stationary phase cultures and accumulated to remarkably high levels in the lungs of chronically infected mice, indicating a potential contribution to pathogenesis. The ability of tubercle bacilli to adapt to changing environments within the host is critical to their ability to cause disease and to persist during drug treatment; it is likely that novel post-transcriptional regulatory networks will play an important role in these adaptive responses

    Systemic Macrophage Depletion Inhibits Helicobacter bilis-Induced Proinflammatory Cytokine-Mediated Typhlocolitis and Impairs Bacterial Colonization Dynamics in a BALB/c Rag2(-/-) Mouse Model of Inflammatory Bowel Disease

    Get PDF
    Helicobacter bilis, an enterohepatic helicobacter, is associated with chronic hepatitis in aged immunocompetent inbred mice and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in immunodeficient mice. To evaluate the role of macrophages in H. bilis-induced IBD, Rag2(−/−) BALB/c or wild-type (WT) BALB/c mice were either sham dosed or infected with H. bilis Missouri strain under specific-pathogen-free conditions, followed by an intravenous injection of a 0.2-ml suspension of liposomes coated with either phosphate-buffered saline (control) or clodronate (a macrophage depleting drug) at 15 weeks postinfection (wpi). At 16 wpi, the ceca of H. bilis-infected Rag2(−/−) mice treated with control liposomes had significantly higher histopathological lesional scores (for cumulative typhlitis index, inflammation, edema, epithelial defects, and hyperplasia) and higher counts of F4/80(+) macrophages and MPO(+) neutrophils compared to H. bilis-infected Rag2(−/−) mice treated with clodronate liposomes. In addition, cecal quantitative PCR analyses revealed a significant suppression in the expression of macrophage-related cytokine genes, namely, Tnfa, Il-1β, Il-10, Cxcl1, and iNos, in the clodronate-treated H. bilis-infected Rag2(−/−) mice compared to the H. bilis-infected Rag2(−/−) control mice. Finally, cecal quantitative PCR analyses also revealed a significant reduction in bacterial colonization in the clodronate-treated Rag2(−/−) mice. Taken together, our results suggest that macrophages are critical inflammatory cellular mediators for promoting H. bilis-induced typhlocolitis in mice

    A two-step chemical/chiroptical method for determining absolute configurations of α-hydroxy acids

    No full text
    A general, chemical/chiroptical approach based on the CD exciton chirality method has been developed to determine the absolute configuration of α-hydroxy acids. This approach consists of amidation of the carboxyl group with ethanolamine followed by derivatization with the hydrophobic 10,15,20-triphenylporphyrinyl-5-benzoyl chromophore to form p,p-bisporphyrin derivatives which undergo intramolecular stacking. The sign of the observed bisignate couplet resulting from this stacking (in methylcyclohexane) is dictated by the preferred lower energy conformer and reflects the absolute configuration of the stereogenic center

    Helicobacter pylori

    No full text
    • …
    corecore