Title of article :
Relevance of fucosylation and Lewis antigen expression in the bacterial gastroduodenal pathogen Helicobacter pylori Review Article
Author/Authors :
Anthony P. Moran، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
14
From page :
1952
To page :
1965
Abstract :
Helicobacter pylori is a prevalent bacterial, gastroduodenal pathogen of humans that can express Lewis (Le) and related antigens in the O-chains of its surface lipopolysaccharide. The O-chains of H. pylori are commonly composed of internal Lex units with terminal Lex or Ley units or, in some strains, with additional units of Lea, Leb, Lec, sialyl-Lex and H-1 antigens, as well as blood groups A and B, thereby producing a mosaicism of antigenic units expressed. The genetic determination of the Le antigen biosynthetic pathways in H. pylori has been studied, and despite striking functional similarity, low sequence homology occurs between the bacterial and mammalian α(1,3/4)- and α(1,2)-fucosyltransferases. Factors affecting Le antigen expression in H. pylori, that can influence the biological impact of this molecular mimicry, include regulation of fucosyltransferase genes through slipped-strand mispairing, the activity and expression levels of the functional enzymes, the preferences of the expressed enzyme for distinctive acceptor molecules and the availability of activated sugar intermediates. Le mimicry was initially implicated in immune evasion and gastric adaptation by the bacterium, but more recent studies show a role in gastric colonization and bacterial adhesion with galectin-3 identified as the gastric receptor for polymeric Lex on the bacterium. From the host defence aspect, innate immune recognition of H. pylori by surfactant protein D is influenced by the extent of LPS fucosylation. Furthermore, Le antigen expression affects both the inflammatory response and T-cell polarization that develops after infection. Although controversial, evidence suggests that long-term H. pylori infection can induce autoreactive anti-Le antibodies cross-reacting with the gastric mucosa, in part leading to the development of gastric atrophy. Thus, Le antigen expression and fucosylation in H. pylori have multiple biological effects on pathogenesis and disease outcome.
Keywords :
Fucosylation , Helicobacter pylori , Molecular mimicry , Fucosyltransferases , Bacterial pathogenesis , Lewis antigens
Journal title :
Carbohydrate Research
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Carbohydrate Research
Record number :
965511
Link To Document :
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