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Molecular anatomy and pathogenic actions of Helicobacter pylori CagA that underpin gastric carcinogenesis

期刊

CELLULAR & MOLECULAR IMMUNOLOGY
卷 17, 期 1, 页码 50-63

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41423-019-0339-5

关键词

cagA; CagA; Helicobacter pylori; SHP2; PAR1; inflammation; hit-and-run carcinogenesis

资金

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) of Japan [16H06373, 22240085, 25250016, 19K05945, 3205, 22114001, 22114002, 07J03878, 19J12668, 24700965, 5K18399]
  2. Graduate Program for Leaders in Life Innovation (GPLLI) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT) of Japan
  3. CREST, Japan Science and Technology Agency [120200000396]
  4. Uehara Memorial Foundation [137]
  5. Max-Planck Society, Germany
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [22240085, 22114002, 24700965, 16H06373, 3205, 19K05945, 19J12668, 07J03878, 22114001, 25250016] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Chronic infection with Helicobacter pylori cagA-positive strains is the strongest risk factor for gastric cancer. The cagA gene product, CagA, is delivered into gastric epithelial cells via the bacterial type IV secretion system. Delivered CagA then undergoes tyrosine phosphorylation at the Glu-Pro-Ile-Tyr-Ala (EPIYA) motifs in its C-terminal region and acts as an oncogenic scaffold protein that physically interacts with multiple host signaling proteins in both tyrosine phosphorylation-dependent and -independent manners. Analysis of CagA using in vitro cultured gastric epithelial cells has indicated that the nonphysiological scaffolding actions of CagA cell-autonomously promote the malignant transformation of the cells by endowing the cells with multiple phenotypic cancer hallmarks: sustained proliferation, evasion of growth suppressors, invasiveness, resistance to cell death, and genomic instability. Transgenic expression of CagA in mice leads to in vivo oncogenic action of CagA without any overt inflammation. The in vivo oncogenic activity of CagA is further potentiated in the presence of chronic inflammation. Since Helicobacter pylori infection triggers a proinflammatory response in host cells, a feedforward stimulation loop that augments the oncogenic actions of CagA and inflammation is created in CagA-injected gastric mucosa. Given that Helicobacter pylori is no longer colonized in established gastric cancer lesions, the multistep nature of gastric cancer development should include a hit-and-run process of CagA action. Thus, acquisition of genetic and epigenetic alterations that compensate for CagA-directed cancer hallmarks may be required for completion of the hit-and-run process of gastric carcinogenesis.

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