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Carcinogenesis |
Division of Comparative Medicine, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139 [J. G. F., A. B. R., M. I., N. S. T., M. T. W.]; Gastroenterology Division, University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Worcester, MA [T. C. W.]; and Physiological Laboratory, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom [G. D., A. V.]
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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We recently fed a high-salt diet (7.5 versus 0.25%) for 16 weeks to female C57BL/6 mice infected with H. pylori (20) . Half of the infected and control mice were fed the high-salt diet for 2 weeks before dosing and throughout the 16-week experiment. At 16 WPI, mice in both the normal and the high salt diet groups developed moderate to marked atrophic gastritis of the corpus in response to H. pylori infection. Also at 8 and 16 WPI, cfu/g tissue of H. pylori were significantly higher (P < 0.05) in the corpus and antrum of animals in the high-salt diet group compared with those on the normal diet. The gastric pits of the corpus mucosa in mice on the high-salt diet were elongated and colonized by H. pylori more frequently, compared with mice on the normal diet. Collectively, these studies in rodents support the hypothesis that salt can contribute to atrophy and function as a cocarcinogen.
To additionally investigate interactions between H. pylori, we designed an experiment where INS-GAS mice known to develop gastric cancer at 7 months after H. felis infection (21) were infected with H. pylori and fed a high-salt diet to determine whether infection and elevated dietary salt increased the severity of gastric lesions in these mice. We also included male and female mice in the study to determine whether gender influenced disease severity.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Bacteria.
H. pylori Sydney strain was used for oral inoculation as described previously (22)
. The organism was grown for 48 h at 37°C under microaerobic conditions on 5% lysed horse blood agar. The bacteria were harvested after 48 h of growth, resuspended in PBS, assessed by Grams stain and phase microscopy for purity, morphology, and motility and tested for urease, catalase, and oxidase activity.
Experimental Infection.
Forty-eight (divided equally among female and male) INS-GAS mice were p.o. infected with 108 cfu H. pylori Sydney strain in 0.3 ml of PBS given three times every other day. Thirty-eight control mice were dosed with PBS only. Half of the infected and half of the control mice were fed a high-salt diet (7.5 versus 0.75% Purina Labs, special formulation) for 2 weeks before the dosing with H. pylori and throughout the experiment (20)
. At 5 and 7 months after challenge, 12 infected and 46 uninfected mice from each diet group were euthanatized with CO2 (Table 1)
. Gastric tissues were collected from the corpus and antrum and used for quantitative H. pylori culture and histopathological evaluation.
Quantitative Culture.
The weight of the gastric tissue was determined by subtracting the weight of the tube containing media from the weight after adding tissue. The tissue was homogenized using glass tissue grinders and the homogenate diluted 100- and 1000-fold in Brucella broth containing FCS. One hundred µl of each dilution was spread on selective medium: blood agar base no. 2 (Difco) supplemented with 5% horse blood (Remel) and 50 µg/ml amphotericin B, 100 µg/ml vancomycin, 3.3 µg/ml polymyxin B, 200 µg/ml bacitracin, and 10.7 µg/ml naladixic acid (Sigma Chemical Company, St. Louis, MO). Plates were incubated microaerobically at 37°C for 35 days. After verification of H. pylori by Grams stain, urease, catalase and oxidase reactions. Bacterial colonies were counted and the cfu/g of tissue calculated. Comparisons between groups were based on the log concentrations of bacteria.
Histological Evaluation.
At necropsy, the stomach and proximal duodenum were removed and incised along the line of the greater curvature. Luminal contents were removed and the mucosa rinsed with sterile saline. For histopathology, linear strips extending from the squamocolumnar junction through proximal duodenum were taken along the lesser curvature, placed on a card, and fixed in either 10% neutral-buffered formalin or Carnoys fixative. Tissues were routinely paraffin embedded, cut at 5 µm, and stained with H&E for histopathology.
Immunohistochemistry.
Mice received a single infection of BrdUrd at a dose of 5 mg/µg i.p. 1 h before euthanasia (20)
. Unstained, deparaffinized, Carnoys-fixed sections were stained for BrdUrd incorporation as described elsewhere (20)
. Additionally, formalin-fixed sections were antigen retrieved with pepsin (Zymed, San Francisco, CA) for 10 min at 37°C and were labeled with a polyclonal rabbit antibody recognizing the cleaved (activated) form of human caspase-3 (Cell Signaling Technologies, Beverly, MA) or rat monoclonal antibody recognizing mouse leukocyte common antigen (CD45, Ly-5; BD PharMingen, San Diego, CA). Primary antibody binding was detected with species-appropriate biotinylated secondary antibodies (Sigma Chemical Company), streptavidin peroxidase, and 3,3'-diaminobenzidine (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA), and tissues were counterstained with methyl green (Vector Laboratories). Immunohistochemical assays were performed on an automated immunostainer (i6000; Biogenex, San Ramon, CA).
Quantitative Morphometry for Cell Proliferation.
BrdUrd-labeled cell numbers were compared between groups at the 7-month time point by morphometric analysis. Images of tissue sections stained for BrdUrd by immunohistochemistry (described above) were captured with a DXM1200 digital camera (Nikon Instruments, Melville, NY) and morphometric analysis was performed using IPLab 3.5 software for Macintosh (Scanalytics, Inc., Fairfax, VA). Three images of well-oriented orad gastric corpus/animal were analyzed. The gastric mucosa was manually outlined with an electronic drawing tablet (Graphire 2; Wacom Technology, Vancouver, WA), and the bounded area was defined as the region of interest. Color thresholding was used to selectively highlight labeled cells (brown, against a green background).
Serology.
Evaluation of serum antibody responses to H. pylori. Serum was collected at 2, 4, 5, and 7 months and evaluated by ELISA for serum IgG2a (Th1-promoted isotype) and IgG1 (Th2-promoted isotype) using an outer membrane antigen preparation of H. pylori as described previously (24)
. Antigen was coated on plates at a concentration of 10 µg/ml, and sera were diluted 1:100. Biotinylated secondary antibodies included monoclonal antimouse antibodies produced by clones G1-6.5 and R19-157 (BD PharMingen) for detecting IgG1 and IgG2a, respectively. Incubation with extravidin peroxidase (Sigma Chemical Company) was followed by ABTS substrate (Kirkegaard and Perry Laboratories, Gaithersburg, MD) for color development. Absorbance development at 405
was recorded by an ELISA plate reader (Dynatech MR7000; Dynatech Laboratories, Inc., Chantilly, VA).
Statistical Analysis.
An ANOVA was performed to examine the effect of helicobacter infection, gender, high-salt diet, and duration of infection (time) on the corpus and antral gastric lesions, helicobacter colonization, and serological responses of INS-GAS transgenic mice. In addition to the level of colonization in each of the gastric compartments, there were five histopathological measures of disease assessed in the corpus; inflammation, glandular atrophy, hyperplasia, metaplasia and dysplasia/neoplasia, and two antral measures; inflammation and hyperplasia that were assessed. The ANOVA model for each disease marker contained all independent variables and significant two-way interaction terms.
To investigate the influence of gender, diet and time on the pathogenesis of helicobacter-induced disease in more depth, a second ANOVA was performed for each lesion variable using the data from infected animals only. Graphs of the significant interactions were constructed to study the relationship of all interactions in greater detail. The colonization data were log transformed before any analyses. They were then subjected to analysis with the same ANOVA model as that used to analyze the histopathology scores. For BrdUrd analysis, percentages of the region of interest (i.e., gastric mucosa) containing BrdUrd label were tabulated and analyzed statistically using Prism 3.0 software for Macintosh (GraphPad, San Diego, CA). Mean differences between groups were assessed by one-way ANOVA, with values
0.05 considered significant. Comparisons between pairs of groups were performed using the Student t test.
Gastrin Radioimmunoassay.
Plasma gastrin levels (COOH-terminally amidated gastrin) were determined by radioimmunoassay using rabbit antiserum L2 that reacts similarly with G17 and G34 (23)
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| RESULTS |
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Immunohistochemistry.
Leukocyte common antigen (CD45) labeling (Fig. 5, a and b)
subjectively was directly proportional to inflammation scores assigned to H&E-stained sections. Likewise, BrdUrd labeling was proportional to mucosal epithelial hyperplasia scores (see below), and mitotically active cells were encountered both above and below the normal proliferative zone, with disorganization mirroring the overall level of mucosal dysplasia (Fig. 5, c and d)
. Cleaved (activated) caspase-3 was detected in surface (terminal) epithelial cells regardless of degree of dysplasia or cellular atypia (Fig. 5, e and f)
, suggesting that dysplastic cells in this model retained the functional cell signaling pathways necessary for terminal apoptosis. Marked cellular pleomorphism and variation in surface epithelial thickness precluded meaningful quantitative comparison of the number of caspase-3-positive cells in dysplastic stomach sections; however, the relatively uniform immunolabeling of surface epithelium corroborated the widespread finding of apoptotic cells in H&E-stained sections.
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Serum Antibody Responses to H. Pylori.
The Th1-associated serum IgG2a response to H. pylori increased from the time of experimental infection to necropsy at 5 or 7 months (Fig. 6a)
. At 2, 4, 5, and 7 months postinfection, the IgG2a responses were similar among all experimentally infected mice with no influence of gender (P > 0.10) or salt content of the diet (P > 0.27). In contrast, the Th2-associated serum IgG1 response to H. pylori was significant by 2 months postinfection (P < 0.05) but plateaued in most groups of experimentally infected mice through the time of necropsy (Fig. 6b)
. The IgG1 response at 7 months postinfection in infected male INS-GAS mice on the high-salt diet was significantly higher than the infected males on the low-salt diet or infected females on either salt diet (P < 0.012).
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The significant two-way interactions are depicted graphically in Figs. 8
and 9
. When infection status is included as a variable, there is a significant diet by infection interaction (Fig. 8)
. Interestingly, for all fundic parameters, the high-salt diet results in an increase in pathology in the uninfected animals and a marked decrease in the infected animals. When only infected animals are considered in the analyses, there is a significant time by gender interaction (Fig. 9)
. Although time is an important factor in the pathogenesis of disease for both males and females, females have a delayed response to helicobacter infection relative to the males, reflected in the lower lesion scores at the 5-month time point but then show a greater increase in the severity of disease over time, as indicated by the steeper slopes of the female curves.
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| DISCUSSION |
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We previously demonstrated that elevations in gastrin-17 levels have also been associated with an increased risk for gastric glandular atrophy and cancer (21) . Elevation in levels of G-17 in INS-GAS transgenic mice on a FVB background, which we also used in this study, resulted in the spontaneous development of atrophy and gastric cancer in uninfected mice over a period of 12 years and more rapid development of cancer (7 months) in H. felis-infected mice (21) . Our current study demonstrates that H. pylori can likewise induce gastric cancer in male but not female INS-GAS mice within 7 months postinoculation that is independent of dietary salt intake. Dysplastic and neoplastic changes observed in this study, which mirror lesions described in H. felis-infected INS-GAS mice and which are features of H. pylori-associated adenocarcinoma in humans and gerbils, include epithelial dysplasia, papillary and ductular hyperplasia, cellular atypia, and bizarre mitotic figures (25, 26, 27) . Signet ring forms seen in the H. pylori-infected mice with gastric tumors is also seen in H. pylori-associated gastric adenocarcinoma of humans but was not noted in H. felis INS-GAS gastric tumors (21) . However, tumors in H. pylori-infected INS-GAS mice covered less gastric surface area than did tumors induced by H. felis infection (unpublished observations), and vascular invasion was documented in H. felis- but not H. pylori-infected INS-GAS mice by 7 months postinfection (21) . This variation in disease severity may reflect a more robust adaptation of H. felis to the murine stomach or may be the result of inherent differences in bacterial pathogenicity between the two strains [although H. felis is CagA (-) and VacA (-)].
Our study also supports a role for H. pylori-mediated hyperproliferation in the induction of gastric cancer. Immunohistochemical markers of cellular proliferation (BrdUrd incorporation) and apoptosis (activated caspase-3) demonstrated significantly increased mitotic activity associated with H. pylori infection. Although by morphometric analysis, males demonstrated higher BrdUrd labeling indices than did females, these differences did not reach statistical significance, probably because of individual biological and histological sampling variation. Subjective interpretation of caspase-3 labeling revealed no differences in the ability of epithelial cells to undergo apoptosis, regardless of hyperplasia or dysplasia status. Taken together, these findings suggest that the gastric epithelial layer thickening associated with H. pylori infection is attributable more to increased cell proliferation than to decreased apoptosis. Peek et al. (28) have shown that H. pylori infection in gerbils leads to increases in gastric epithelial proliferation that appear to be temporally related to increased serum gastrin levels. This group concluded that the epithelial cell growth in H. pylori-colonized mucosa of the Mongolian gerbil may be mediated by gastrin-dependent mechanisms. Thus, the two animal models described to date that appear most susceptible to Helicobacter-dependent gastric cancerthe INS-GAS mouse and the Mongolian gerbilare both characterized by markedly elevated levels of amidated gastrin. In addition, at least one study has shown that H. pylori-infected patients elevated levels of amidated gastrin at baseline are more likely to progress to glandular atrophy after treatment with proton pump inhibitors (29) .
In our study, gastric cancer was observed only in the infected male INS-GAS mice. Previous studies have shown that susceptibility to Helicobacter-mediated atrophy and preneoplasia is strongly influenced by genetics, but little attention has been paid to gender although male humans are at increased risk to develop gastric cancer. For example, several groups have demonstrated that C57BL mice have a vigorous Th1-mediated gastric inflammation after infection with Helicobacter spp, whereas the BALB/c mouse has minimal gastric inflammation (indicative of a Th2 response). In general, there is an inverse relationship between the strength of the Th1 response and the level of Helicobacter colonization (30) . The cell-mediated immune hyporesponsiveness to gastric helicobacter infection observed in disease-resistant strains such as BALB/c and CBA mice appears to be a dominant trait, as evidenced by results from analysis of the gastric phenotype in F1 generation of CBA/c x C57BL infected with gastric helicobacters (31 , 32) . These investigators had also used both females and males but compared with our 7 month study, their study period was for 3 months, and a gender effect was not noted (31 , 32) . Indeed, many studies use female mice based on the practicality that cohoused female mice are less likely to fight when compared with cohoused male mice.
Recently, however, a gender effect in mice was described in an oral vaccination trial using interleukin receptor 4
chain-deficient BALB/c mice in which H. pylori native urease (5 µg) and cholera toxin (10 µg) administered at weekly intervals for 4 weeks provided protection against 109 cfu of mouse-adapted P76 H. pylori (33)
These authors noted higher colonization rates in H. pylori-infected control male interleukin receptor 4
mice and wild-type male BALB/c mice than in their female counterparts (33)
. This finding was statistically significant in interleukin receptor 4
-/- mice. Unfortunately, histopathological correlates of gastric disease between male and female mice were not presented (33)
. Our study documents clearly the greater susceptibility of male gastric tissue to H. pylori infection, a finding consistent with the higher rates of gastric carcinoma in men. The INS-GAS mouse model will likely be useful in additional investigations that will address the mechanisms responsible for this gender difference in susceptibility.
The most surprising finding was perhaps the absence of synergism in the INS-GAS mouse model between H. pylori infection and a high-salt diet. In an earlier study performed in H. pylori-infected C57BL/6 mice, we demonstrated that a high-salt diet accelerated the development of hyperproliferation, pit cell hyperplasia, and glandular atrophy (20) . However, this C57/BL mouse study was terminated at 16 WPI, rather than the 7-month observation period in the current study (20) . Nevertheless, we speculated that chronic salt intake may exacerbate gastritis by increasing H. pylori colonization density and theorized that the increased colonization might be attributable to several mechanisms (20) . Terminal serum gastrin concentrations were statistically increased in H. pylori-infected C57BL mice on a normal diet versus uninfected controls (51.8 versus 23.7 pm) and elevated in infected mice fed high-salt diets when compared with control mice on the same diet (20) , although the serum gastrin concentrations did not wholly parallel the colonization data. Previous reports had suggested that high-salt diets can be associated with hypergastrinemia. Taken together, our results raised the possibilities that the observed salt-associated effects occurred in part through the induction of gastrin (20) .
In this study, we noted an increase in H. pylori colonization density in INS-GAS mice over time that was independent of salt intake or gender, and we found that the high-salt diet showed a clear-cut protective effect in this animal model. Only the infected INS-GAS male mice on a low-salt diet developed gastric cancer. Overall, the INS-GAS/H. pylori mice on a high-salt diet showed decreased histological progression to atrophy and neoplasia, which was also reflected by lesser increases in serum gastrin levels, suggesting better preservation of acid secretion and parietal cell function. Possible explanations for these different findings include differences in murine genetic background in the two studies and the unique characteristics of the INS-GAS mice. Although the possibility cannot be excluded that FVB/N mice respond differently than C57BL/6 mice to a high-salt diet, a more plausible explanation relates to the robust nature of the INS-GAS/H. pylori model. It is likely that the unique and rapid progression to atrophy, metaplasia, and cancer seen in the H. pylori-infected INS-GAS mouse has eclipsed the procarcinogenic effect of the high-salt diet, thereby unmasking protective effects that would have otherwise been obscured. The absence of a additive effect by high salt in this hypergastrinemic model system strongly suggests that high salt in wild-type mice, e.g., C57BL mice, is acting, in part, through induction of hypergastrinemia (20) . In INS-GAS mice, however, there is already a sufficient elevation of circulating gastrin such that high salt no longer has a potentiating effect. In addition, it is likely that high salt is less able to induce gastrin release in these mice because antral gastrin expression is highly suppressed by circulating pancreatic gastrin in the INS-GAS transgenic model. Thus, the absence of a potentiating effect by high salt in the INS-GAS model is most consistent with a model in which gastrin is a downstream target of high salt.
The mechanism by which high salt exerts its protective effect in the INS-GAS/H. pylori model is currently unknown. However, it is of interest that the high-salt diet in infected male mice was associated with an enhanced anti-inflammatory Th2 humoral immune response to H. pylori antigens, which correlated with less severe gastric lesions and the absence of clear neoplastic transformation at 7 months postinfection. Mouse strains exhibiting weak type-1 responses to H. pylori exhibited a significant Th2 cytokine response to helicobacter antigens, and these findings support our observation of an enhanced Th2 humoral immune response in the infected males fed a high-salt diet for 7 months postinfection. The possibility that high salt is able to modulate the immune and gastric cytokine response (e.g., interleukin 1ß) to H. pylori no doubt bears additional investigation.
In summary, we did not see, as expected, a synergistic effect with salt and H. pylori in the INS-GAS mouse. This supports the notion that in the mouse model, constitutive hypergastrinemia and high dietary salt intake are nonadditive risk factors for development of H. pylori-induced adenocarcinoma. This result is supportive of the model that gastrin acts downstream of and mediates the effects of high salt in the acceleration of gastric cancer, but additional studies are needed to clarify this issue. However, to our knowledge, this is the first study documenting a statistical difference in severity of gastritis with progression to gastric cancer in male versus female mice infected with H. pylori. Additional work is needed to determine whether the male-associated risk factors leading to gastric tumors in INS-GAS mice infected with H. pylori are the same as those in male A/J mice infected with H. hepaticus, which are more susceptible to hepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma than their female counterparts (34) . Our findings in the H. pylori-infected male INS-GAS mice is consistent with a greater incidence of gastric cancer in men and highlights the potential of using H. pylori-infected INS-GAS mice to explore gender-dependent mechanisms of gastric carcinogenesis.
| FOOTNOTES |
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1 Supported by NIH Grants T32-RR07036 and AI37750 (to J. G. F.) and NIH R01 CA93405 (to T. C. W.). ![]()
2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Division of Comparative Medicine, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Building 16, Room 825C, Cambridge, MA 02139. Phone: (617) 253-1757; Fax: (617) 252-1877; E-mail: jgfox{at}mit.edu ![]()
3 The abbreviations used are: MNNG, N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine; WPI, weeks postinfection; cfu, colony-forming unit. ![]()
Received 9/26/02. Accepted 1/ 6/03.
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C.-W. Lee, B. Rickman, A. B. Rogers, S. Muthupalani, S. Takaishi, P. Yang, T. C. Wang, and J. G. Fox Combination of Sulindac and Antimicrobial Eradication of Helicobacter pylori Prevents Progression of Gastric Cancer in Hypergastrinemic INS-GAS Mice Cancer Res., October 15, 2009; 69(20): 8166 - 8174. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Garcia, M. M. Ihrig, R. C. Fry, Y. Feng, S. Xu, S. R. Boutin, A. B. Rogers, S. Muthupalani, L. D. Samson, and J. G. Fox Genetic Susceptibility to Chronic Hepatitis Is Inherited Codominantly in Helicobacter hepaticus-Infected AB6F1 and B6AF1 Hybrid Male Mice, and Progression to Hepatocellular Carcinoma Is Linked to Hepatic Expression of Lipogenic Genes and Immune Function-Associated Networks Infect. Immun., May 1, 2008; 76(5): 1866 - 1876. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Ohtani, A. Garcia, A. B. Rogers, Z. Ge, N. S. Taylor, S. Xu, K. Watanabe, R. P. Marini, M. T. Whary, T. C. Wang, et al. Protective role of 17 -estradiol against the development of Helicobacter pylori-induced gastric cancer in INS-GAS mice Carcinogenesis, December 1, 2007; 28(12): 2597 - 2604. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. Hansen, S. E. Vollset, M. H Derakhshan, V. Fyfe, K. K Melby, S. Aase, E. Jellum, and K. E L McColl Two distinct aetiologies of cardia cancer; evidence from premorbid serological markers of gastric atrophy and Helicobacter pylori status Gut, July 1, 2007; 56(7): 918 - 925. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. A. Lunn, R. Jacamo, and E. Rozengurt Preferential Phosphorylation of Focal Adhesion Kinase Tyrosine 861 Is Critical for Mediating an Anti-apoptotic Response to Hyperosmotic Stress J. Biol. Chem., April 6, 2007; 282(14): 10370 - 10379. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. G. Kusters, A. H. M. van Vliet, and E. J. Kuipers Pathogenesis of Helicobacter pylori Infection Clin. Microbiol. Rev., July 1, 2006; 19(3): 449 - 490. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K. J. Maurer, A. B. Rogers, Z. Ge, A. J. Wiese, M. C. Carey, and J. G. Fox Helicobacter pylori and cholesterol gallstone formation in C57L/J mice: a prospective study Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol, January 1, 2006; 290(1): G175 - G182. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. B. Rogers, N. S. Taylor, M. T. Whary, E. D. Stefanich, T. C. Wang, and J. G. Fox Helicobacter pylori but not High Salt Induces Gastric Intraepithelial Neoplasia in B6129 Mice Cancer Res., December 1, 2005; 65(23): 10709 - 10715. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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Y. Yamaoka, K. Yamauchi, H. Ota, A. Sugiyama, S. Ishizone, D. Y. Graham, F. Maruta, M. Murakami, and T. Katsuyama Natural History of Gastric Mucosal Cytokine Expression in Helicobacter pylori Gastritis in Mongolian Gerbils Infect. Immun., April 1, 2005; 73(4): 2205 - 2212. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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G. Cui, T. J. Koh, D. Chen, C.-M. Zhao, S. Takaishi, G. J. Dockray, A. Varro, A. B. Rogers, J. G. Fox, and T. C. Wang Overexpression of Glycine-Extended Gastrin Inhibits Parietal Cell Loss and Atrophy in the Mouse Stomach Cancer Res., November 15, 2004; 64(22): 8160 - 8166. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. C. Paterson, S. M. Lockhart, J. Baker, G. Neumann, G. S. Baldwin, and A. Shulkes Identity and Regulation of Stored and Secreted Progastrin-Derived Peptides in Sheep Endocrinology, November 1, 2004; 145(11): 5129 - 5140. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. B. Rogers, S. R. Boutin, M. T. Whary, N. Sundina, Zhongming Ge, K. Cormier, and J. G. Fox Progression of Chronic Hepatitis and Preneoplasia in Helicobacter hepaticus-Infected A/JCr Mice Toxicol Pathol, October 1, 2004; 32(6): 668 - 677. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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H Eguchi, S Carpentier, S S Kim, and S F Moss p27kip1 regulates the apoptotic response of gastric epithelial cells to Helicobacter pylori Gut, June 1, 2004; 53(6): 797 - 804. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. B. Rogers and J. G. Fox Inflammation and Cancer I. Rodent models of infectious gastrointestinal and liver cancer Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol, March 1, 2004; 286(3): G361 - G366. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. G. Fox, A. B. Rogers, M. T. Whary, Z. Ge, N. S. Taylor, S. Xu, B. H. Horwitz, and S. E. Erdman Gastroenteritis in NF-{kappa}B-Deficient Mice Is Produced with Wild-Type Camplyobacter jejuni but Not with C. jejuni Lacking Cytolethal Distending Toxin despite Persistent Colonization with Both Strains Infect. Immun., February 1, 2004; 72(2): 1116 - 1125. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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F.-F. Chu, R. S. Esworthy, P. G. Chu, J. A. Longmate, M. M. Huycke, S. Wilczynski, and J. H. Doroshow Bacteria-Induced Intestinal Cancer in Mice with Disrupted Gpx1 and Gpx2 Genes Cancer Res., February 1, 2004; 64(3): 962 - 968. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. E. Erdman, V. P. Rao, T. Poutahidis, M. M. Ihrig, Z. Ge, Y. Feng, M. Tomczak, A. B. Rogers, B. H. Horwitz, and J. G. Fox CD4+CD25+ Regulatory Lymphocytes Require Interleukin 10 to Interrupt Colon Carcinogenesis in Mice Cancer Res., September 15, 2003; 63(18): 6042 - 6050. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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