Díaz Paula, Valenzuela Valderrama Manuel, Bravo Jimena, Quest Andrew F G
Cellular Communication Laboratory, Instituto de Ciencias Biomédicas, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Advanced Center for Chronic Diseases, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Front Microbiol. 2018 Jan 22;9:5. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2018.00005. eCollection 2018.
() infection is the major risk factor associated with the development of gastric cancer. The transition from normal mucosa to non-atrophic gastritis, triggered primarily by infection, initiates precancerous lesions which may then progress to atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia. Further progression to dysplasia and gastric cancer is generally believed to be attributable to processes that no longer require the presence of . The responses that develop upon infection are directly mediated through the action of bacterial virulence factors, which drive the initial events associated with transformation of infected gastric cells. Besides genetic and to date poorly defined environmental factors, alterations in gastric cell stress-adaptive mechanisms due to appear to be crucial during chronic infection and gastric disease progression. Firstly, infection promotes gastric cell death and reduced epithelial cell turnover in the majority of infected cells, resulting in primary tissue lesions associated with an initial inflammatory response. However, in the remaining gastric cell population, adaptive responses are induced that increase cell survival and proliferation, resulting in the acquisition of potentially malignant characteristics that may lead to precancerous gastric lesions. Thus, deregulation of these intrinsic survival-related responses to infection emerge as potential culprits in promoting disease progression. This review will highlight the most relevant cellular adaptive mechanisms triggered upon infection, including endoplasmic reticulum stress and the unfolded protein response, autophagy, oxidative stress, and inflammation, together with a subsequent discussion on how these factors may participate in the progression of a precancerous lesion. Finally, this review will shed light on how these mechanisms may be exploited as pharmacological targets, in the perspective of opening up new therapeutic alternatives for non-invasive risk control in gastric cancer.
()感染是与胃癌发生相关的主要危险因素。主要由该感染引发的从正常黏膜向非萎缩性胃炎的转变,启动了癌前病变,随后这些病变可能进展为萎缩性胃炎和肠化生。一般认为,进一步发展为发育异常和胃癌归因于不再需要该感染存在的过程。该感染引发的反应是通过细菌毒力因子的作用直接介导的,这些毒力因子驱动与受感染胃细胞转化相关的初始事件。除了遗传因素和迄今定义不明确的环境因素外,该感染导致的胃细胞应激适应机制改变在慢性感染和胃病进展过程中似乎至关重要。首先,该感染在大多数受感染细胞中促进胃细胞死亡并减少上皮细胞更新,导致与初始炎症反应相关的原发性组织病变。然而,在其余的胃细胞群体中,会诱导适应性反应,增加细胞存活和增殖,导致获得可能导致癌前胃部病变的潜在恶性特征。因此,对该感染的这些内在生存相关反应的失调成为促进疾病进展的潜在罪魁祸首。本综述将重点介绍该感染引发的最相关细胞适应性机制,包括内质网应激和未折叠蛋白反应、自噬、氧化应激和炎症,并随后讨论这些因素如何参与癌前病变的进展。最后,本综述将阐明如何将这些机制作为药理学靶点加以利用,以期为胃癌的非侵入性风险控制开辟新的治疗选择。