Title
Effects of Helicobacter hepaticus on the proteome of HEp-2 cells
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2007
Abstract
Helicobacter hepaticus infects the bowel and biliary tree of several animals, producing inflammation. Colonisation of mouse livers can induce hepatocellular carcinomas. The effects of H. hepaticus on the proliferation and global protein expression of human HEp-2 cells were studied by examining the changes in the protein profiles of cells exposed to the bacterium. HEp-2 cells were grown for four days under a microaerobic atmosphere or under the same conditions in co-cultures with H. hepaticus at various inoculum densities. Enlargement, distension and elongation of HEp-2 cells were observed in co-cultures with H. hepaticus. The number of live cells declined by only an order of magnitude at bacterial inocula of ∼109 cfu/ml, but were reduced to less than 103 cells/ml at ∼1010 cfu/ml bacteria inocula. Protein expression by HEp-2 cells was investigated employing two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. In cells grown with or without bacteria, 17 differentially expressed proteins were identified by tandem mass spectrometry. These proteins participated in several biological functions including amino acid metabolism, cell growth and proliferation, stress response, protein translation and modification, etc. The onset of a catastrophic killing of HEp-2 cells at a bacterial density of ∼109 cfu/ml suggested a multimodal action for H. hepaticus infection, and the modulation of the expression of proteins involved in different biological functions showed that the presence of H. hepaticus has broad effects on the physiology of HEp-2 cells.
Recommended Citation
Okoli, A. S., Fox, E. M., Raftery, M. J., & Mendz, G. L. (2007). Effects of Helicobacter hepaticus on the proteome of HEp-2 cells. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 92(3), 289-300. doi: 10.1007/s10482-007-9155-5

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