• Contact
    • Imprint
    • Sitemap
      • Deutsch

UNIWUE UBWUE Universitätsbibliothek

  • Home
  • Search
  • Browse
  • Publish
  • Help
Schließen

Refine

Keywords

  • cell cycle (1) (remove)

Author

  • Chabas, Sandrine (1) (remove)

1 search hit

  • 1 to 1
  • BibTeX
  • CSV
  • RIS
  • XML
  • 10
  • 20
  • 50
  • 100
Helicobacter pylori interferes with an embryonic stem cell micro RNA cluster to block cell cycle progression (2011)
Belair, Cédric ; Baud, Jessica ; Chabas, Sandrine ; Sharma, Cynthia M ; Vogel, Jörg ; Staedel, Cathy ; Darfeuille, Fabien
Background MicroRNAs, post-transcriptional regulators of eukaryotic gene expression, are implicated in host defense against pathogens. Viruses and bacteria have evolved strategies that suppress microRNA functions, resulting in a sustainable infection. In this work we report that Helicobacter pylori, a human stomach-colonizing bacterium responsible for severe gastric inflammatory diseases and gastric cancers, downregulates an embryonic stem cell microRNA cluster in proliferating gastric epithelial cells to achieve cell cycle arrest. Results Using a deep sequencing approach in the AGS cell line, a widely used cell culture model to recapitulate early events of H. pylori infection of gastric mucosa, we reveal that hsa-miR-372 is the most abundant microRNA expressed in this cell line, where, together with hsa-miR-373, it promotes cell proliferation by silencing large tumor suppressor homolog 2 (LATS2) gene expression. Shortly after H. pylori infection, miR-372 and miR-373 synthesis is highly inhibited, leading to the post-transcriptional release of LATS2 expression and thus, to a cell cycle arrest at the G1/S transition. This downregulation of a specific cell-cycle-regulating microRNA is dependent on the translocation of the bacterial effector CagA into the host cells, a mechanism highly associated with the development of severe atrophic gastritis and intestinal-type gastric carcinoma. Conclusions These data constitute a novel example of host-pathogen interplay involving microRNAs, and unveil the couple LATS2/miR-372 and miR-373 as an unexpected mechanism in infection-induced cell cycle arrest in proliferating gastric cells, which may be relevant in inhibition of gastric epithelium renewal, a major host defense mechanism against bacterial infections.
  • 1 to 1

DINI-Zertifikat     OPUS4 Logo