4.2 Article

Helicobacter hepaticus infection in primary hepatocellular carcinoma tissue

Journal

SINGAPORE MEDICAL JOURNAL
Volume 54, Issue 8, Pages 451-457

Publisher

SINGAPORE MEDICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.11622/smedj.2013153

Keywords

Helicobacter hepaticus; Helicobacter pylori; primary hepatocellular carcinoma

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [3067300]

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INTRODUCTION Helicobacter (H.) hepaticus infection causes chronic active hepatitis and induces hepatocellular tumours in A/JCr mice, but evidence of this in humans is scarce. This study aimed to demonstrate the correlation between H. hepaticus and human primary hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). METHODS The sera of 50 patients with primary HCC were tested for the presence of anti-H. pylori and anti-H. hepaticus immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies. The liver tissues of patients who tested positive for serum antibody were analysed for H. hepaticus-specific 16S rRNA, H. hepaticus cdtB, H. pylori cagA, H. pylori vacA and H. pylori ureC genes using polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS After the anti-H. pylori antibodies in the serum samples were absorbed by H. pylori antigen, the anti-H. hepaticus IgG serum antibody detection rate was 50.0% in patients with primary HCC. This was significantly higher (p < 0.001) than the detection rate in the benign liver tumour (7.7%) and normal liver tissue (6.3%) groups. Of the 25 primary HCC samples that tested positive for anti-H. hepaticus IgG serum antibody, the H. hepaticus-specific 16S rRNA gene was detected in nine (36.0%) samples. Sequencing showed that the polymerase chain reaction-amplified product exhibited 95.5%-100% homology to the H. hepaticus-specific 16S rRNA gene. Among these nine primary HCC tissue samples, the H. hepaticus cdtB gene was detected in four (44.4%) samples, while no such expression was observed in the benign liver tumour or normal liver tissue groups. CONCLUSION The present study identified the presence of H. hepaticus infection in patients with primary HCC using serological and molecular biological detection, suggesting that H. hepaticus infection may be involved in the progression of HCC.

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