Intracellular, intercellular, and stromal invasion of gastric mucosa, preneoplastic lesions, and cancer by Helicobacter pylori
- PMID: 17383424
- DOI: 10.1053/j.gastro.2007.01.049
Intracellular, intercellular, and stromal invasion of gastric mucosa, preneoplastic lesions, and cancer by Helicobacter pylori
Abstract
Background and aims: It is not clear how Helicobacter pylori, an apparently extracellular pathogen colonizing the luminal side of the gastric epithelium, invariably causes an immune-inflammatory response on the stromal side of the mucosa. Penetration of H pylori into epithelial cell lines and its interaction with immune-inflammatory cells have been documented in vitro. Several investigations also showed in vivo bacterial penetration into the epithelium up to the lamina propria; however, the identification as H pylori of the bacteria-like bodies observed in unchanged, metaplastic, or neoplastic mucosa remained sometimes questionable.
Methods: To search for bacteria-like organisms, we used transmission electron microscopy on endoscopic biopsy specimens from 20 dyspeptic subjects and surgical specimens of neoplastic and nonneoplastic mucosa from 20 cancerous stomachs. To ascertain the H pylori nature of the organisms found, we used 6 different antibodies directed against bacterial lysates, purified vacuolating cytotoxin A, or purified cytotoxin-associated antigen A in immunogold tests. The results were compared with those of H pylori strains cultivated in vitro.
Results: In nonmetaplastic gastric epithelium, cytochemically proven H pylori were detected, in the majority of cases, inside cytoplasm of epithelial cells, in intraepithelial intercellular spaces, and in underlying lamina propria, often in direct contact with immune-inflammatory cells and sometimes inside small blood vessels. Cytochemically proven H pylori were also observed inside 6 of 8 intestinal metaplasias and 9 of 20 cancers.
Conclusions: H pylori penetrates normal, metaplastic, and neoplastic gastric epithelium in vivo, intracellularly, or interstitially to cause a strong immune-inflammatory response and promote gastric carcinogenesis.
Comment in
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Intracellular Helicobacter pylori and gastric carcinogenesis: an "old" frontier worth revisiting.Gastroenterology. 2007 Mar;132(3):1177-80. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2007.01.068. Gastroenterology. 2007. PMID: 17383438 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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