Abstract

Helicobacter pylori transactivates the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) and predisposes to gastric cancer development in humans and animal models. To examine the importance of EGFR signalling to gastric pathology, this study investigated whether treatment of Mongolian gerbils with a selective EGFR tyrosine kinase inhibitor, EKB-569, altered gastric pathology in chronic H. pylori infection. Gerbils were infected with H. pylori and six weeks later received either EKB-569-supplemented, or control diet, for 32 weeks prior to sacrifice. EKB-569-treated H. pylori-infected gerbils had no difference in H. pylori colonisation or inflammation scores compared to infected animals on control diet, but showed significantly less corpus atrophy, mucous metaplasia and submucosal glandular herniations along with markedly reduced antral and corpus epithelial proliferation to apoptosis ratios. EKB-569-treated infected gerbils had significantly decreased abundance of Cox-2, Adam17 and Egfr gastric transcripts relative to infected animals on control diet. EGFR inhibition by EKB-569 therefore reduced the severity of pre-neoplastic gastric pathology in chronically H. pylori-infected gerbils. EKB-569 increased gastric epithelial apoptosis in H. pylori-infected gerbils which counteracted some of the consequences of increased gastric epithelial cell proliferation. Similar chemopreventative strategies may be useful in humans who are at high risk of developing H. pylori- induced gastric adenocarcinoma.

Highlights

  • Infection with the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori is associated with increased risk of developing distal gastric cancer [1,2]

  • The aims of this study were to investigate the effects of a selective Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) tyrosine kinase inhibitor, EKB-569 [30] on H. pylori-induced gastric pathology, epithelial hyperproliferative responses and expression of genes in the EGFR triple membrane passing signalling (TMPS) cascade which are essential for EGFR transactivation [31]

  • ERK1/2 phosphorylation in A-431 cells was examined as a readout of EGFR signalling rather than phosphorylated EGFR due to cross reactivity of pEGFR antibodies with H. pylori [16]

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Summary

Introduction

Infection with the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori is associated with increased risk of developing distal gastric cancer [1,2]. H. pylori strains with the cag pathogenicity island (cag PAI), a type IV secretory system [6], are associated with both increased inflammation and epithelial cell signalling responses [1,2,4,5]. Studies identified that both cag PAI positive and negative H. pylori strains transactivate the EGFR on gastric epithelial cells [14,15,16] to bacterial pathogens infecting other sites such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa [17]. H. pylori induced cleavage of membrane bound proHB-EGF is mediated by a disintegrin and matrix metalloprotease-17 (ADAM17) [18].

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