Health
Related: About this forumGastric ulcer bacteria hide from the immune system
http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/lab-rat/2012/02/26/gastric-ulcer-bacteria-hide-from-the-immune-system/A while ago, I wrote about how Helicobacter pylori, the bacteria that cause stomach ulcers and are implicated in certain stomach cancers, cause the cells of the stomach wall to die. H. pylori kills cells very sneakily, by releasing a chemical that causes them to commit suicide. It turns out that this is not the only sneaky trick H. pylori has, it can also hide from the immune system by changing its outer cell membrane.
The immune system protects your body from any invading elements, and because of this it needs a way to distinguish body cells from invading cells. The cells of the immune system do this by recognising bits of bacteria as foreign invaders, and of course the first bit of the bacteria they see is the outer cell membrane. H. pylori has a way of making parts of its outer cell membrane look very similar to human blood group antigens, so the immune cell doesnt recognise it as an invader.
This image seemed necessary...
The bacterial cell membrane is made up of lipopolysaccharides (i.e lipids, or fats, connected to polysaccharides - sugars). H. pylori has ways to modify the biosynthesis pathway of these lipopolysaccharides to produce different structures. In particular to lipid A, which is part of the structure on the surface of H. pylori.
The bacteria have several different ways that they modify the lipid A. Firstly, they can reduce the lipids overall negative charge, either by adding positively charged substrates, or by removing negatively charged phosphate groups. This makes the bacteria more resilient to certain antimicrobial peptides that bind to negative charges. They can also add extra bits to the lipid A (in particular acyl groups) which make the surface of the bacteria harder to for immune cells to recognise. This lipid A modification pathway is highly ordered and efficient. Rather than producing all different kinds of lipid A at the surface, each bacterium will be covered in one type of modified lipid A.
Lipid A from E. coli, with the phosphate groups circled in red. Image credit below.
liberal N proud
(60,335 posts)Thanks for posting.
xchrom
(108,903 posts)The Backlash Cometh
(41,358 posts)snagglepuss
(12,704 posts)large doses of antibiotics, I did a lot of reading and came to the conclusion that antibiotics as well as Nexim eas reuired. It is extremely difficult bug to get rid of. Excellent info at HPylori.org
MOMFUDSKI
(5,546 posts)I had H Pylori a few years back and it was awful. Stomach hurt almost constantly. Doc took a blood test to find it. Then I had 3 weeks of super strong antiobiotic and 2 penicillin pills twice per day. My mouth was fried. All food tasted like it had a tablespoon of horseradish on it. But I got rid of it. I decided if I had money I would make H Pylori my cause in third world countries where many of the people have it. Every time I hear about the poor water quality in those countries I wince thinking of the pain those poor people are in.