The human pathogen Helicobacter pylori is the strongest known risk factor for gastric disease and cancer, and gastric cancer remains a leading cause of cancer-related death across the globe. Carcinogenic mechanisms associated with H. pylori are multifactorial and are driven by bacterial virulence constituents, host immune responses, environmental factors such as iron and salt, and the microbiota. Infection with strains that harbor the cytotoxin-associated genes (cag) pathogenicity island, which encodes a type IV secretion system (T4SS) confer increased risk for developing more severe gastric diseases. Other important H. pylori virulence factors that augment disease progression include vacuolating cytotoxin A (VacA), specifically type s1m1 vacA alleles, serine protease HtrA, and the outer-membrane adhesins HopQ, BabA, SabA and OipA. Additional risk factors for gastric cancer include dietary factors such as diets that are high in salt or low in iron, H. pylori-induced perturbations of the gastric microbiome, host genetic polymorphisms, and infection with Epstein-Barr virus. This chapter discusses in detail host factors and how H. pylori virulence factors augment the risk of developing gastric cancer in human patients as well as how the Mongolian gerbil model has been used to define mechanisms of H. pylori-induced inflammation and cancer.
Keyphrases
- inflammatory response
- helicobacter pylori
- escherichia coli
- epstein barr virus
- endothelial cells
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- staphylococcus aureus
- biofilm formation
- high glucose
- helicobacter pylori infection
- immune response
- papillary thyroid
- antimicrobial resistance
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- oxidative stress
- newly diagnosed
- diffuse large b cell lymphoma
- squamous cell
- diabetic rats
- drug induced
- weight loss
- gene expression
- lymph node metastasis
- candida albicans
- protein kinase
- iron deficiency
- childhood cancer