Itoh Toshiyuki, Yoshida Masaru, Chiba Tsutomu, Kita Toru, Wakatsuki Yoshio
Department of Clinical Bio-regulatory Science, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine, 54 Kawahara-cho Shogoin, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto city 606-8507, Japan.
Helicobacter. 2003 Aug;8(4):268-78. doi: 10.1046/j.1523-5378.2003.00154.x.
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infection is associated with chronic infiltration into the stomach by T cells and plasma cells producing IFN-gamma and antibodies of various specificities, respectively. It is unknown whether these lymphocyte-products may play coordinated roles in the gastric pathology of this infection.
To know how IFN-gamma may relate to anti-H. pylori antibodies in their roles in pathogenesis, we determined the isotype subclass of those antibodies as well as their cross-reactivity and cytotoxicity to gastric epithelium.
We infected BALB/c mice with H. pylori (SS1, Sydney Strain 1) and generated monoclonal antibodies, which were comprised of 240 independent clones secreting immunoglobulin and included 80 clones reactive to SS1. Ninety percent of the SS1-reactive clones had IgG2a isotype. Two clones, 2B10 and 1A9, were cross reactive to cell surface antigens in H. pylori and to antigens of 28 KDa and 42 KDa, respectively, which were present on the cell surface of and shared by both mouse and human gastric epithelial cells. The antigens recognized by these monoclonal antibodies localized a distinctive area in the gastric glands. In the presence of complement, 2B10 showed cytotoxicity to gastric epithelial cells. The effect was dose dependant and augmented by IFN-gamma. Finally, administration of 2B10 to mice with SS1 infection aggravated gastritis by increasing cellular infiltration.
IFN-gamma by gastric T cells may participate in pathogenesis of the H. pylori infected stomach by directing an isotype-switch of anti-H. pylori antibodies to complement-binding subclass and by augmenting cytotoxic activity of a certain autoantibody. This may explain a host-dependent diversity in gastric pathology of the patients with H. pylori infection.
幽门螺杆菌(H. pylori)感染与T细胞和浆细胞对胃的慢性浸润有关,T细胞和浆细胞分别产生γ干扰素和具有各种特异性的抗体。尚不清楚这些淋巴细胞产物是否在这种感染的胃部病理过程中发挥协同作用。
为了解γ干扰素在发病机制中如何与抗幽门螺杆菌抗体相关联,我们确定了这些抗体的同种型亚类及其对胃上皮细胞的交叉反应性和细胞毒性。
我们用幽门螺杆菌(SS1,悉尼菌株1)感染BALB/c小鼠,并产生单克隆抗体,这些单克隆抗体由240个分泌免疫球蛋白的独立克隆组成,其中包括80个对SS1有反应的克隆。90%对SS1有反应的克隆具有IgG2a同种型。两个克隆,2B10和1A9,分别与幽门螺杆菌的细胞表面抗原以及存在于小鼠和人胃上皮细胞表面并为两者共有的28 kDa和42 kDa抗原发生交叉反应。这些单克隆抗体识别的抗原定位于胃腺中的一个独特区域。在补体存在的情况下,2B10对胃上皮细胞表现出细胞毒性。这种作用呈剂量依赖性,并被γ干扰素增强。最后,给感染SS1的小鼠注射2B10会通过增加细胞浸润而加重胃炎。
胃T细胞产生的γ干扰素可能通过引导抗幽门螺杆菌抗体向补体结合亚类的同种型转换以及增强某种自身抗体的细胞毒性活性,参与幽门螺杆菌感染胃的发病机制。这可能解释了幽门螺杆菌感染患者胃部病理中宿主依赖性的差异。