Abstract

Helicobacter pylori cagA-positive strains are associated with gastric adenocarcinoma. The cagA gene product CagA is delivered into gastric epithelial cells where it localizes to the plasma membrane and undergoes tyrosine phosphorylation at the EPIYA-repeat region, which contains the EPIYA-A segment, EPIYA-B segment, and Western CagA-specific EPIYA-C or East Asian CagA-specific EPIYA-D segment. In host cells, CagA specifically binds to and deregulates SHP-2 phosphatase via the tyrosine-phosphorylated EPIYA-C or EPIYA-D segment, thereby inducing an elongated cell shape known as the hummingbird phenotype. In this study, we found that CagA multimerizes in cells in a manner independent of its tyrosine phosphorylation. Using a series of CagA mutants, we identified a conserved amino acid sequence motif (FPLXRXXXVXDLSKVG), which mediates CagA multimerization, within the EPIYA-C segment as well as in a sequence that located immediately downstream of the EPIYA-C or EPIYA-D segment. We also found that a phosphorylation-resistant CagA, which multimerizes but cannot bind SHP-2, inhibits the wild-type CagA-SHP-2 complex formation and abolishes induction of the hummingbird phenotype. Thus, SHP-2 binds to a preformed and tyrosinephosphorylated CagA multimer via its two Src homology 2 domains. These results, in turn, indicate that CagA multimerization is a prerequisite for CagA-SHP-2 interaction and subsequent deregulation of SHP-2. The present work raises the possibility that inhibition of CagA multimerization abolishes pathophysiological activities of CagA that promote gastric carcinogenesis.

Highlights

  • Helicobacter pylori is a micro-aerophilic spiral-shaped bacterium

  • The EPIYA-repeat region of the CagA protein of H. pylori isolated in Western countries contains the EPIYA-A, EPIYA-B, and Western CagA-specific EPIYA-C segments

  • We examined the structural basis of CagA multimerization and identified the multimerization motif that is highly conserved between Western and East Asian CagA proteins

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Summary

Introduction

Helicobacter pylori is a micro-aerophilic spiral-shaped bacterium. It colonizes the human stomach and is estimated to inhabit at least half of the world’s human population. Sequential immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting of the cell lysates with anti-HA and -FLAG antibodies revealed that CagA-ABD, which possesses the EPIYA-repeat region from Western CagA and East Asian CagA are primarily characterized proteins (such as SHP-2 and Csk) that interact with CagA in by the difference in the structure of the EPIYA-repeat region, we a tyrosine phosphorylation-dependent manner (11, 19).

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