Chemotaxis and motility of Helicobacter pylori in a viscous environment.

Accession number;00A0234921
Title;Chemotaxis and motility of Helicobacter pylori in a viscous environment.
Author; YOSHIYAMA H (Yamaguchi Univ. School Of Medicine, Ube, Jpn) NAKAMURA H (Yamaguchi Univ. School Of Medicine, Ube, Jpn) KIMOTO M (Yamaguchi Univ. School Of Medicine, Ube, Jpn) OKITA K (Yamaguchi Univ. School Of Medicine, Ube, Jpn) NAKAZAWA T (Yamaguchi Univ. School Of Medicine, Ube, Jpn)
Journal Title;J Gastroenterol
Journal Code:Z0748A
ISSN:0944-1174
VOL.34;NO.Supplement 11;PAGE.18-23(1999)
Figure&Table&Reference;FIG.4, REF.36
Pub. Country;Japan
Language;English
Abstract;The chemotactic activity of Helicobacter pylori is important for its colonization. H. pylori exhibited chemotactic responses to urea and potassium bicarbonate, which can be supplied from human gastric epithelium. The chemotactic activities of H. pylori in a fluid environment were higher on the urease-positive strain than on the isogenic urease-negative strain. In a viscous solution containing 3 % Polyvinylpyrrolidone, the urease-positive strain showed stimulated chemotactic activity, whereas the urease-negative mutant did not show such stimulation. These results were in accordance with the fact that the mutant strain did not show swarming, which is a form of bacterial active motility in the viscous environment in soft agar regardless of having flagella. Incubation of the wild-type strain with urease inhibitors partially inhibited the chemotactic activities in the viscous solution. Inhibition of the chemotactic activity by urease inhibitors paralleled the inhibition of urease activity. The chemotactic activity of H. pylori has been shown to utilize proton motive force for motility. These results highlighted the importance of cytoplasmic urease for chemotactic motility of H. pylori possibly by an increase in the proton motive force under a condition that mimics the gastric mucus layer, in which the bacteria reside. These results indicated a possible application of drugs having urease-inhibiting potential for eradicatihg H. pylori. The significance of swarming in the expression of bacterial virulence was also discussed. (author abst.)
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