H Pylori
Copyright ©2007 Baishideng Publishing Group Co., Limited. All rights reserved.
World J Gastroenterol. Aug 7, 2007; 13(29): 3939-3947
Published online Aug 7, 2007. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v13.i29.3939
H pylori infection causes chronic pancreatitis in Mongolian gerbils
Gabriele Rieder, Arno Karnholz, Mechthild Stoeckelhuber, Juanita L Merchant, Rainer Haas
Gabriele Rieder, Arno Karnholz, Rainer Haas, Max von Pettenkofer-Institute for Hygiene and Medical Microbiology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, 80336 Munich, Germany
Mechthild Stoeckelhuber, Institute of Anatomy, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, 80336 Munich, Germany
Juanita L Merchant, University of Michigan, Departments of Internal Medicine and Molecular and Integrative Physiology, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Author contributions: All authors contributed equally to the work.
Supported by grants from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (SFB576) to RH and (RI 972/3-1) to GR, and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) (NGFN-2) to RH, and by US Public Health Service Grants P01 DK062041 and R01DK45729 to JLM
Correspondence to: Gabriele Rieder, PhD, Max von Pettenkofer-Institute, Pettenkoferstr. 9a, D-80336 Munich, Germany. rieder@mvp.uni-muenchen.de
Telephone: +49-89-51605424 Fax: +49-89-51605223
Received: January 25, 2007
Revised: February 5, 2007
Accepted: February 14, 2007
Published online: August 7, 2007
Abstract

AIM: To investigate whether chronic H pylori infection has the potential to induce pancreatitis in the Mongolian gerbil model, and whether it is dependent on an intact type IV secretion system.

METHODS: Mongolian gerbils were infected with wild type (WT) H pylori typeIstrain B128 or its isogenic mutant B128 ΔcagY (defective type IV secretion). After seven months of infection, H pylori was reisolated from antrum and corpus and H pylori DNA was analyzed by semi-nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Inflammation and histological changes were documented in the gastric antrum, corpus, and pancreas by immunohistochemistry. Cytokine mRNA, gastric pH, plasma gastrin, amylase, lipase, and glucose levels were determined.

RESULTS: The H pylori infection rate was 95%. Eight infected animals, but none of the uninfected group, developed transmural inflammation and chronic pancreatitis. Extensive interstitial fibrosis and inflammation of the pancreatic lobe adjacent to the antrum was confirmed by trichrome stain, and immuno-histochemically. Pro-inflammatory cytokine mRNA was significantly increased in the antral mucosa of all infected gerbils. In the corpus, only cytokine levels of WT-infected animals and those developing transmural inflammation and pancreatitis were significantly increased. Levels of lipase, but not glucose or amylase levels, were significantly reduced in the pancreatitis group. H pylori DNA was detected in infected antral and corpus tissue, but not in the pancreas.

CONCLUSION: H pylori infection is able to induce chronic pancreatitis in Mongolian gerbils independently of the type IV secretion system, probably by an indirect mechanism associated with a penetrating ulcer.

Keywords: H pylori; Mongolian gerbil; Pancreatitis; Gastritis; Penetrating ulcer