Helicobacter pylori ( ) is a
Gram-negative,
microaerophilic bacterium that can inhabit various areas of the
stomach and
duodenum. It causes a chronic low-level
inflammation of the stomach lining and is
strongly linked to the development of duodenal and gastric
ulcer and stomach
cancer. Over 80% of individuals infected
with the bacterium are
asymptomatic.
The bacterium was initially named
Campylobacter pyloridis,
then renamed
C. pylori (pylori = genitive of
pylorus) to correct a
Latin
grammar error. When
16S rRNA gene sequencing and other research showed in
1989 that the bacterium did not belong in the genus
Campylobacter, it was placed in its own
genus,
Helicobacter. The genus derived from the
Ancient Greek hělix/έλιξ
"spiral" or "coil". The specific epithet
pylōri means "of
the pylorus" or
pyloric valve (the
circular opening leading from the stomach into the
duodenum), from the Ancient Greek word
πυλωρός, which means
gatekeeper.
More than 50% of the world's population harbour
H. pylori
in their upper
gastrointestinal
tract. Infection is more prevalent in developing countries, and
incidence is decreasing in western countries. The route of
transmission is unknown, although it is known individuals typically
become infected in childhood.
H. pylori's helix shape
(from which the
generic name is derived) is
thought to have evolved to penetrate the
mucoid lining of the stomach.
Microbiology

Scanning electron micrograph of
H.
pylori
H. pylori is a
helix-shaped
Gram-negative bacterium, about
3 micrometres long with a diameter of about
0.5 micrometres. It is
microaerophilic; that is, it requires
oxygen, but at lower concentration than is
found in the
atmosphere. It
contains a
hydrogenase which can be used
to obtain energy by oxidizing molecular
hydrogen (H
2) that is produced by
intestinal bacteria. It produces
oxidase,
catalase, and
urease. It is capable of forming
biofilms and can convert from spiral to a possibly
viable but nonculturable
coccoid form, both
likely to favor its survival and be factors in the
epidemiology of the bacterium. The coccoid form
can adhere to gastric epithelial cells
in
vitro.
H. pylori possesses five major
outer membrane protein (OMP) families. The
largest family includes known and putative
adhesins. The other four families include porins,
iron transporters, flagellum-associated proteins and proteins of
unknown function. Like other typical Gram-negative bacteria, the
outer membrane of
H. pylori consists of
phospholipids and
lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The
O antigen of LPS may be
fucosylated and mimic Lewis
blood group antigens found on the gastric
epithelium. The outer membrane also contains
cholesterol glucosides, which are found in few
other bacteria.
H. pylori has 4–6
flagella; all gastric and enterohepatic
Helicobacter species are highly motile due to flagella.
The characteristic sheathed flagellar filaments of helicobacters
are composed of two copolymerized flagellins, FlaA and FlaB.
Genome
H. pylori consists of a large diversity of strains, and
the
genomes of three have been completely
sequenced. The genome of the strain
"26695" consists of about 1.7 million
base pairs, with some 1,550 genes. The two
sequenced strains show large genetic differences, with up to 6% of
the
nucleotides differing.
Study of the
H. pylori genome is centered on attempts to
understand
pathogenesis, the ability of
this
organism to cause disease.
Approximately 29% of the loci are in the "pathogenesis" category of
the genome database. Both sequenced strains have an approximately
40
kb-long Cag
pathogenicity island (a common
gene sequence believed responsible for
pathogenesis) that contains over 40 genes. This pathogenicity
island is usually absent from
H. pylori strains isolated
from humans who are carriers of
H. pylori but remain
asymptomatic.
The
cagA gene codes for one of the major
H.
pylori virulence proteins. Bacterial
strains that have the
cagA gene are associated with an
ability to cause ulcers. The
cagA gene codes for a
relatively long (1186
amino acid)
protein. The
cag pathogenicity island (PAI) has about 30
genes, part of which code for a complex
type IV secretion
system. The low GC content of the
cag PAI relative to
the rest of the helicobacter genome suggests that the island was
acquired by
horizontal
transfer from another bacterial species.
Pathophysiology

Molecular model of
H. pylori
urease enzyme
To colonize the stomach
H. pylori must survive the acidic
pH of the
lumen and burrow into the
mucus to reach its niche, close to the
stomach's epithelial cell layer. The bacterium has
flagella and moves through the stomach lumen and
drills into the mucoid lining of the stomach. Many bacteria can be
found deep in the mucus, which is continuously secreted by
mucous cells and removed on the luminal side. To
avoid being carried into the lumen,
H. pylori senses the
pH gradient within the mucus layer by
chemotaxis and swims away from the acidic
contents of the lumen towards the more neutral pH environment of
the epithelial cell surface.
H. pylori is also found on
the inner surface of the stomach
epithelial cells and occasionally inside
epithelial cells. It produces
adhesins which
bind to membrane-associated
lipids and
carbohydrates and help it adhere to
epithelial cells. For example, the adhesin BabA binds to the Lewis
b antigen displayed on the surface of stomach epithelial cells.
H. pylori produces large amounts of the enzyme
urease, molecules of which are localized inside and
outside of the bacterium. Urease breaks down
urea (which is normally secreted into the stomach) to
carbon dioxide and
ammonia (ammonia is converted into the ammonium ion
by taking hydrogen from water upon its breakdown into hydrogen and
hydroxyl ions. Hydroxyl ions then react with carbon dioxide,
producing bicarbonate which neutralizes
gastric acid). The survival of
H.
pylori in the acidic stomach is dependent on urease, and it
would eventually die without the enzyme. The ammonia that is
produced is toxic to the epithelial cells, and, along with the
other products of
H. pylori—including
protease, vacuolating cytotoxin A (VacA), and
certain
phospholipases—damages those
cells.
Colonization of the stomach by
H. pylori results in
chronic gastritis, an inflammation of the stomach lining. The
severity of the inflammation is likely to underlie
H.
pylori-related diseases. Duodenal and stomach ulcers result
when the consequences of inflammation allow the acid and
pepsin in the stomach lumen to overwhelm the
mechanisms that protect the stomach and duodenal mucosa from these
caustic substances. The type of ulcer that develops depends on the
location of chronic gastritis, which occurs at the site of
H.
pylori colonization. The acidity within the stomach lumen
affects the colonization pattern of
H. pylori and
therefore ultimately determines whether a duodenal or gastric ulcer
will form. In people producing large amounts of acid,
H.
pylori colonizes the
antrum of the
stomach to avoid the acid-secreting
parietal cells located in the
corpus (main body) of the stomach. The inflammatory
response to the bacteria induces
G cells in
the antrum to secrete the hormone
gastrin,
which travels through the bloodstream to the corpus. Gastrin
stimulates the parietal cells in the corpus to secrete even more
acid into the stomach lumen. Chronically increased gastrin levels
eventually cause the number of parietal cells to also increase,
further escalating the amount of acid secreted. The increased acid
load damages the duodenum, and ulceration may eventually result. In
contrast, gastric ulcers are often associated with normal or
reduced gastric acid production, suggesting that the mechanisms
that protect the gastric mucosa are defective. In these patients
H. pylori can also colonize the
corpus of the stomach, where the acid-secreting
parietal cells are located. However
chronic inflammation induced by the bacteria causes further
reduction of acid production and, eventually, atrophy of the
stomach lining, which may lead to gastric ulcer and increases the
risk for stomach cancer.
About 50-70% of
H. pylori strains in Western countries
carry the
cag pathogenicity island (
cag PAI).
Western patients infected with strains carrying the
cag
PAI have a stronger inflammatory response in the stomach and are at
a greater risk of developing peptic ulcers or stomach cancer than
those infected with strains lacking the island. Following
attachment of
H. pylori to stomach epithelial cells the
type IV secretion system expressed by the
cag PAI
"injects" the
inflammatory inducing
agent
peptidoglycan from their own
cell wall into the epithelial cells. The
injected peptidoglycan is recognized by the cytoplasmic
immune sensor Nod1, which then
stimulates expression of
cytokines that
promote
inflammation.
The type IV
secretion apparatus also
injects the
cag PAI-encoded protein CagA into the
stomach's epithelial cells, where it disrupts the
cytoskeleton, adherence to adjacent cells,
intracellular signaling, cell polarity and other cellular
activities. Once inside the cell the CagA protein is
phosphorylated on
tyrosine
residues by a host cell membrane-associated
tyrosine kinase. Pathogenic strains of
H. pylori have been shown to activate the
epidermal growth factor
receptor (EGFR), a
membrane
protein with a tyrosine kinase domain. Activation of the EGFR
by
H. pylori is associated with altered
signal transduction and
gene expression in host epithelial cells
that may contribute to pathogenesis. It has also been suggested
that a
c-terminal region of the CagA
protein (amino acids 873–1002) can regulate host cell
gene transcription independent of
protein tyrosine phosphorylation. There is a great deal of
diversity between strains of
H. pylori, and the strain
with which one is infected is predictive of the outcome.
Two related mechanisms by which
H. pylori could promote
cancer are under investigation. One mechanism
involves the enhanced production of
free
radicals near
H. pylori and an increased rate of host
cell
mutation. The other proposed mechanism
has been called a "perigenetic pathway" and involves enhancement of
the transformed host cell phenotype by means of alterations in cell
proteins such as
adhesion proteins. It has been proposed that
H. pylori induces
inflammation
and locally high levels of
TNF-α and/or
interleukin 6. According to the
proposed perigenetic mechanism, inflammation-associated signaling
molecules such as TNF-α can alter gastric epithelial cell adhesion
and lead to the dispersion and migration of mutated epithelial
cells without the need for additional mutations in
tumor suppressor genes such as genes
that code for cell adhesion proteins.
Diagnosis
Diagnosis of infection is usually made by checking for
dyspeptic symptoms and by tests which can indicate
H. pylori infection. One can test noninvasively for
H.
pylori infection with a
blood antibody test, stool
antigen
test, or with the
carbon urea breath test (in which the
patient drinks
14C- or
13C-labelled
urea,
which the bacterium metabolizes, producing labelled
carbon dioxide that can be detected in the
breath). However, the most reliable method for detecting
H.
pylori infection is a
biopsy check
during
endoscopy with a
rapid urease test,
histological examination, and microbial
culture. There is also a urine ELISA test with a 96% sensitivity
and 79% specificity. None of the test methods is completely
failsafe. Even biopsy is dependent on the location of the biopsy.
Blood antibody tests, for example, range from 76% to 84%
sensitivity. Some drugs can affect
H. pylori urease activity and give
false negatives with
the urea-based tests.
Prevention
H. pylori is a major cause of diseases of the upper
gastrointestinal tract. Eradication of the infection in individuals
will improve symptoms including dyspepsia, gastritis and peptic
ulcers, and may prevent gastric cancer. Rising antimicrobial
resistance increases the need for a prevention strategy for the
bacteria. There have been extensive vaccine studies in mouse
models, which have shown promising results. Researchers are
studying different
adjuvants,
antigens, and routes of immunization to ascertain
the most appropriate system of immune protection, with most of the
research only recently moving from animal to human trials.
An intramuscular vaccine against
H. pylori infection is
undergoing
Phase I clinical trials and has shown an antibody
response against the bacterium. Its clinical usefulness requires
further study.
Studies have recently been published suggesting that
H.
pylori activity could be suppressed via dietary methods. A
2009 Japanese study in
Cancer Prevention Research found
that eating as little as 70 g (2.5 ounces) of
broccoli sprouts daily for two months
reduces the number of colonies of
H. pylori bacteria in
the stomach by 40% in mice and humans. This treatment also seems to
help by enhancing the protection of the gastric mucosa against
H. pylori, but is relatively ineffective on related
gastric cancers. The previous infection returned within two months
after broccoli sprouts were removed from the diet, so an ongoing
inclusion in the diet is best for continued protection from
H.
pylori.
A 2008 study published in
Korean Journal of Microbiology and
Biotechnology found that
kimchi contains
a bacterium strain "showing strong antagonistic activity against
H. pylori." The bacterium strain isolated from
kimchi, designated
Lb. plantarum NO1, was
found to reduce the urease activity of
H. pylori by 40-60%
and suppress the latter bacteria's binding to human gastric cancer
cell line by more than 33%.
Treatment
Once
H. pylori is detected in patients with a
peptic ulcer, the normal procedure is to
eradicate it and allow the ulcer to heal. The standard
first-line therapy is a one week
triple therapy consisting of a
proton pump inhibitor such as
omeprazole and the antibiotics
clarithromycin and
amoxicillin. Variations of the triple therapy
have been developed over the years, such as using a different
proton pump inhibitor, as with
pantoprazole or
rabeprazole, or replacing amoxicillin with
metronidazole for people who are
allergic to
penicillin. Such a therapy
has revolutionized the treatment of peptic ulcers and has made a
cure to the disease possible; previously the only option was
symptom control using
antacids,
H2-antagonists or
proton pump inhibitors alone.
An increasing number of infected individuals are found to harbour
antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
This results in initial treatment failure and requires additional
rounds of antibiotic therapy or alternative strategies such as a
quadruple therapy, which adds a
bismuth
colloid. For the treatment of
clarithromycin-resistant strains of
H.
pylori the use of
levofloxacin as
part of the therapy has been suggested.
Some practitioners of "functional medicine" use herbal formulas to
treat Helicobacter pylori infection and claim a great rate of
success. However, there are no peer-reviewed clinical studies that
provide evidence of the effectiveness of herbal formulas, though
many remedies are offered.
Prognosis
H. pylori colonizes the stomach and induces chronic
gastritis, a long-lasting inflammation of
the stomach. The bacterium persists in the stomach for decades in
most people. Most individuals infected by
H. pylori will
never experience clinical symptoms despite having chronic
gastritis. Approximately 10-20% of those colonized by
H.
pylori will ultimately develop gastric and duodenal ulcers.
H. pylori infection is also associated with a 1-2%
lifetime risk of
stomach cancer
and a less than 1% risk of gastric
MALT
lymphoma.
It is widely believed that in the absence of treatment,
H.
pylori infection—once established in its gastric
niche—persists for life. In the elderly, however, it is likely
infection can disappear as the stomach's mucosa becomes
increasingly atrophic and inhospitable to colonization. The
proportion of acute infections that persist is not known, but
several studies that followed the natural history in populations
have reported apparent spontaneous elimination.
While
H. pylori has been disappearing from the stomach of
humans, the incidence of the related disorders
acid reflux disease,
Barrett's esophagus, and
esophageal cancer have been rising
dramatically. In 1996,
Martin J.
Blaser advanced the hypothesis that
H. pylori has a beneficial effect: by regulating the
acidity of the stomach contents, it lowers the impact of
regurgitation of gastric acid into the esophagus. The hypothesis is
not universally accepted as several
randomized controlled trials
failed to demonstrate worsening of acid reflux disease symptoms
following eradication of
H. pylori. Nevertheless, Blaser
has refined his view to assert that
H. pylori is a member
of the
normal flora of the stomach. He
postulates that the changes in gastric physiology caused by the
loss of
H. pylori account for the recent increase in
incidence of several diseases, including
type 2 diabetes,
obesity, and
asthma. His group
has recently shown that
H. pylori colonization is
associated with a lower
incidence of childhood
asthma.
Epidemiology
At least half the world's population are infected by the bacterium,
making it the most widespread infection in the world. Actual
infection rates vary from nation to nation; the
Third World has much higher infection rates than
the West (
Western Europe, North
America, Australasia), where rates are estimated to be around 25%.
Infections are usually acquired in early childhood in all
countries. However, the infection rate of children in developing
nations is higher than in
industrialized nations, probably due to
poor sanitary conditions. In developed nations it is currently
uncommon to find infected children, but the percentage of infected
people increases with age, with about 50% infected for those over
the age of 60 compared with around 10% between 18 and 30 years. The
higher prevalence among the elderly reflects higher infection rates
when they were children rather than infection at later ages.
Prevalence appears to be higher in
African-American and Hispanic populations,
although this is likely related to socioeconomic rather than racial
factors. The lower rate of infection in the West is largely
attributed to higher hygiene standards and widespread use of
antibiotics. Despite high rates of infection in certain areas of
the world, the overall frequency of
H. pylori infection is
declining. However,
antibiotic
resistance is appearing in
H. pylori; there are
already many
metronidazole- and
clarithromycin-resistant strains in
most parts of the world.
H. pylori is contagious, although the exact route of
transmission is not known. Person-to-person transmission by either
the oral-oral or
fecal-oral route
is most likely. Consistent with these transmission routes, the
bacteria have been isolated from
feces,
saliva and
dental
plaque of some infected people. Transmission occurs mainly
within families in developed nations yet can also be acquired from
the community in developing countries.
H. pylori may also
be transmitted orally by means of fecal matter through the
ingestion of waste-tainted water, so a hygienic environment could
help decrease the risk of
H. pylori infection.
History
Helicobacter pylori (H.pylori for short) was first discovered in
the stomachs of patients with gastritis & stomach ulcers nearly
25 years ago by Dr Barry J. Marshall and Dr J. Robin Warren of
Perth, Western Australia. At the time (1982/83) the conventional
thinking was that no bacterium can live in the human stomach as the
stomach produced extensive amounts of acid which was similar in
strength to the acid found in a car-battery. Marshall & Warren
“re-wrote” the text-books with reference to what causes gastritis
& gastric ulcers.In recognition of their very important
discovery, they were Awarded the 2005 Nobel Prize for Medicine
& Physiology.German scientists found spiral-shaped
bacteria in the lining of the human
stomach in 1875, but they were unable to
culture it and the results were
eventually forgotten. The Italian researcher
Giulio Bizzozero described similarly shaped
bacteria living in the acidic environment of the stomach of dogs in
1893.
Professor Walery
Jaworski of the Jagiellonian
University in Kraków
investigated
sediments of gastric washings obtained from
humans in 1899. Among some rod-like bacteria, he also found
bacteria with a characteristic spiral shape, which he called
Vibrio rugula. He was the first to suggest a possible role
of this organism in the pathogenesis of gastric diseases. This work
was included in the
Handbook of Gastric Diseases, but it
had little impact as it was written in Polish. Several small
studies conducted in the early 1900s demonstrated the presence of
curved rods in the stomach of many patients with peptic ulcers and
stomach cancer. However interest in the bacteria waned when an
American study published in 1954 failed to observe the bacteria in
1180 stomach biopsies.
Interest in understanding the role of bacteria in stomach diseases
was rekindled in the 1970s with the visualization of bacteria in
the stomach of gastric ulcer patients. The bacterium had also been
observed in 1979 by Australian pathologist
Robin Warren, who did further research on it
with Australian physician
Barry
Marshall beginning in 1981. After numerous unsuccessful
attempts at culturing the bacteria from the stomach, they finally
succeeded in visualizing colonies in 1982 when they unintentionally
left their
Petri dishes incubating for
5 days over the Easter weekend. In their original paper, Warren and
Marshall contended that most stomach ulcers and gastritis were
caused by infection by this bacterium and not by
stress or
spicy food
as had been assumed before.
Although there was some skepticism initially, within several years,
numerous research groups verified the association of
H.
pylori with gastritis and to a lesser extent ulcers. To
demonstrate that
H. pylori caused gastritis and was not
merely a bystander, Marshall drank a beaker of
H. pylori.
He became ill several days later with nausea and vomiting. An
endoscopy ten days after inoculation
revealed signs of gastritis and the presence of
H. pylori.
These results suggested that
H. pylori was the causative
agent of gastritis. Marshall and Warren went on to show that
antibiotics are effective in the treatment of many cases of
gastritis. In 1987 the Sydney
gastroenterologist Thomas Borody invented the first triple
therapy for the treatment of duodenal ulcers.
In 1994, the National
Institutes of Health
(USA) published an opinion stating that most
recurrent duodenal and gastric ulcers were caused by H.
pylori and recommended that antibiotics be included in the treatment
regimen. Warren and Marshall were awarded the
Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2005 for
their work on
H. pylori.
Recent research states that
genetic
diversity in
H. pylori decreases with geographic
distance from
East Africa, the
birthplace of modern humans. Using the genetic diversity data, the
researchers have created simulations that indicate the bacteria
seems to have spread from East Africa around 58,000 years ago.
Their results indicate modern humans were already infected by
H. pylori before their migrations out of Africa, remaining
associated with human hosts since that time.
References
External links