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Colonization and inflammation deficiencies in Mongolian gerbils infected by Helicobacter pylori chemotaxis mutants D J. McGee, University of South Alabama College of Medicine M L. Langford E L. Watson J E. Carter Y T. Chen K M. Ottemann, University of California, Santa Cruz
ABSTRACT: Helicobacter pylori causes disease in the human stomach and in mouse
and gerbil stomach models. Previous results have shown that motility is
critical for H. pylori to colonize mice, gerbils, and other animal models. The
role of chemotaxis, however, in colonization and disease is less well
understood. Two genes in the H. pylori chemotaxis pathway, cheY and tlpB, which
encode the chemotaxis response regulator and a methyl-accepting chemoreceptor,
respectively, were disrupted. The cheY mutation was complemented with a
wild-type copy of cheY inserted into the chromosomal rdxA gene. The cheY mutant
lost chemotaxis but retained motility, while all other strains were motile and
chemotactic in vitro. These strains were inoculated into gerbils either alone
or in combination with the wild-type strain, and colonization and inflammation
were assessed. While the cheY mutant completely failed to colonize gerbil
stomachs, the tlpB mutant colonized at levels similar to those of the wild
type. With the tlpB mutant, there was a substantial decrease in inflammation in
the gerbil stomach compared to that with the wild type. Furthermore, there were
differences in the numbers of each immune cell in the tlpB-mutant-infected
stomach: the ratio of lymphocytes to neutrophils was about 8 to 1 in the wild
type but only about 1 to 1 in the mutant. These results suggest that the TlpB
chemoreceptor plays an important role in the inflammatory response while the
CheY chemotaxis regulator plays a critical role in initial colonization.
Chemotaxis mutants may provide new insights into the steps involved in H.
pylori pathogenesis.
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