Chronic inflammation in the stomach (gastritis) is usually associated with Helicobacter pylori, but may occur from bacterial overgrowth because of hypochlorhydria. Chronic gastritis also results in initial increase then loss of parietal cells over time (chronic atrophic gastritis). A recurring theme is that disruption of parietal cell function eventually results in fewer parietal cells followed by an expansion of the mucous and undifferentiated cell types in the stomach. Interestingly, destruction of the parietal cell through ectopic expression of toxins has also been reported to generate the same phenotype. In some instances, these phenotypic alterations progress to the point where mucous cell types emerge, a subset of which express intestine-specific genes (intestinal metaplasia). Intestinal metaplasia is a condition that predisposes the gastric mucosa to cancer. Central to initiating these important alterations are changes in the parietal cell population. In this proposal, we hypothesize that an important trigger altering the normal phenotypic pattern of gastric epithelial cells is inflammation generated from bacterial colonization. The primary goal of this proposal is to understand how components of a bacterial infection trigger parietal cell atrophy and subsequently pre-neoplastic changes. The preliminary results show that both CagA and INF( alter gastric architecture. First, the experiments proposed use a transgenic mouse model expressing CagA (Aim 1) or treatment of mice with pro-inflammatory cytokines (Aim 2) to alter parietal and mucous cell populations. Second, in vitro studies in primary parietal and mucous cells cultures, will be used to dissect the signaling pathways activated (Aim 3) and will study the target proteins regulated during the transformation of the mucosa from chronic atrophy to dysplasia (Aim 4). We will examine whether Sonic hedgehog expressed primarily in parietal cells may be lost during parietal cell atrophy and contribute to the increase in mucosal proliferation and subsequently transformation. These studies will further our understanding of how corpus atrophy predisposes the gastric mucosa to neoplastic transformation. ? ?
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