Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology,1 and
2. Institute of Microbiology,2 University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The vacuolating cytotoxin and the cytotoxin-associated protein, encoded by
vacA
and
cagA
, respectively, are important virulence determinants of
Helicobacter pylori
. Sixty-five
H. pylori
strains were isolated from dyspeptic patients (19 with peptic ulcer disease, 43 with chronic gastritis, and 3 with gastric cancer) and studied for differences in the
vacA
and
cagA
genes and their relationship to VacA and CagA expression, cytotoxin activity, and the clinical outcome of infection. By PCR, fifty-four (83.1%) of 65 strains had the
vacA
signal sequence genotype s1 and only 10 (15.4%) had the type s2. After primer modification, the
vacA
middle-region types m1 and m2 were detected in 24 (36.9%) and 41 (63.1%) strains, respectively. The combinations s1-m2 (31 [47.7%]) and s1-m1 (23 [35.4%]) occurred more frequently than s2-m2 (10 [15.4%]) (
P
= 0.01). No strain with the combination s2-m1 was found. All 19 patients with peptic ulcers harbored type s1 strains, in contrast to 32 (74.4%) of 43 patients with gastritis (
P
= 0.02). The
vacA
genotype s1 was associated with the presence of
cagA
(
P
< 0.0001), VacA expression (
P
< 0.0001), and cytotoxin activity (
P
= 0.003). The
cagA
gene was detectable in 48 (73.8%) of 65 isolates and present in 16 (84.2%) of 19 ulcer patients and 29 (67.4%) of 43 patients with gastritis (
P
= 0.17). The
vacA
genotypes of German
H. pylori
isolates are identical to those previously reported.
H. pylori
strains of
vacA
type s1 are associated with the occurrence of peptic ulceration and the presence of
cagA
, cytotoxin activity, and VacA expression.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
182 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献