Affiliation:
1. Department of Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology, Lund University Hospital, Lund,1 and
2. Transplantation Unit, Department of Surgery,2 and
3. Hepato-Gastroenterology Unit,3Department of Medicine, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Sahlgrenska, Gothenburg, Sweden
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Helicobacter pylori
was identified in human liver tissue by PCR, hybridization, and partial DNA sequencing. Liver biopsies were obtained from patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis (
n
= 12), primary biliary cirrhosis (
n
= 12), and noncholestatic liver cirrhosis (
n
= 13) and (as controls) normal livers (
n
= 10). PCR analyses were carried out using primers for the
Helicobacter
genus,
Helicobacter pylori
(the gene encoding a species-specific 26-kDa protein and the 16S rRNA),
Helicobacter bilis
,
Helicobacter pullorum
, and
Helicobacter hepaticus
. Samples from patients with primary biliary cirrhosis and primary sclerosing cholangitis (11 and 9 samples, respectively) were positive by PCR with
Helicobacter
genus-specific primers. Of these 20 samples, 8 were positive with the 16S rRNA primer and 9 were positive with the 26-kDa protein primer of
H. pylori
. These nine latter samples were also positive by Southern blot hybridization for the amplified 26-kDa fragment, and four of those were verified to be
H. pylori
by partial 16S rDNA sequencing. None of the samples reacted with primers for
H. bilis
,
H. pullorum
, or
H. hepaticus
. None of the normal livers had positive results in the
Helicobacter
genus PCR assay, and only one patient in the noncholestatic liver cirrhosis group, a young boy who at reexamination showed histological features suggesting primary sclerosing cholangitis, had a positive result in the same assay.
Helicobacter
positivity was thus significantly more common in patients with cholestatic diseases (20 of 24) than in patients with noncholestatic diseases and normal controls (1 of 23) (
P
= <0.00001). Patients positive for
Helicobacter
genus had significantly higher values of alkaline phosphatases and prothrombin complex than
Helicobacter
-negative patients (
P
= 0.0001 and
P
= 0.0003, respectively). Among primary sclerosing cholangitis patients,
Helicobacter
genus PCR positivity was weakly associated with ulcerative colitis (
P
= 0.05). Significant differences related to blood group or HLA status were not found.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
224 articles.
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