Sara Kadkhodaei, Atousa Hatefi, Shahrzad Pedramnia, Elham Godini, Saman Khalili-Samani, Parastoo Saniee, Abdolfattah Sarrafnejad, Ali-Hatef Salmanian, Masoud Sotoudeh, David Y Graham, Reza Malekzadeh, Farideh Siavoshi
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The relationship between oral and gastric yeasts and their role in the colonization of Helicobacter pylori in the stomach was studied. Four groups of 221, 7, 44, and 10 patients were used for the isolation of H. pylori and oral and gastric yeasts. In Group 1, gastric biopsies were used for the isolation of H. pylori and yeast, rapid urease test (RUT), staining with Gram's and hematoxylin & eosin (H&E), and immunohistochemistry (IHC) methods. In the other three groups, DNAs extracted from H. pylori and yeasts were used for the amplification of H. pylori-specific genes. Wet mounts of yeasts in Group 2 were examined to observe intracellular bacteria and released EVs. Among 221 patients, 65 (29.3%) had oral yeast, 35 (15.8%) H. pylori, and 31 (14%) gastric yeast. Culture of oral yeasts showed a significant correlation with the detection of H. pylori by IHC (10.3%), Gram stain (9%), RUT (6.3%), H&E (4.9%), and culture (4%) (p < 0.05). Gram-stained biopsies showed the occurrence of yeast and H. pylori, and the release of EVs from yeast. Detection of similar H. pylori genes in oral and gastric yeasts from patients in Group 2 showed their common source. Oral yeasts in Groups 3 and 4 also carried H. pylori genes. Wet mount preparations of yeasts showed intracellular bacteria inside the yeast vacuole and the release of EVs that could carry H. pylori. Oral yeast protects its intracellular H. pylori and releases it inside EVs to safely reach gastric mucosa. Yeast, as the environmental reservoir of H. pylori, plays a crucial role in bacterial reinfection after successful eradication.
期刊介绍:
Yeast publishes original articles and reviews on the most significant developments of research with unicellular fungi, including innovative methods of broad applicability. It is essential reading for those wishing to keep up to date with this rapidly moving field of yeast biology.
Topics covered include: biochemistry and molecular biology; biodiversity and taxonomy; biotechnology; cell and developmental biology; ecology and evolution; genetics and genomics; metabolism and physiology; pathobiology; synthetic and systems biology; tools and resources