The 94th Annual Meeting of Japanese Society for Bacteriology

Presentation information

Symposium

[S4] Interactions between bacterial pathogens and the host immune systems

Wed. Mar 24, 2021 9:15 AM - 11:45 AM Channel 1

Conveners: Tomoko Kubori (Gifu University), Hirotaka Hiyoshi (Institute of Tropical Medicine, Nagasaki University)

[S4-3] Helicobacter metabolites exacerbate gastritis through C-type lectin receptors

○Sho Yamasaki (Dept. Mol. Immunol., RIMD, Osaka Univ.)

Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) causes gastritis, which has been attributed to the development of H. pylori-specific T cells during infection. However, the mechanism underlying innate immune detection leading to the priming of T cells is not fully understood, as H. pylori evades TLR detection. Here, we report that, H. pylori metabolites modified from host cholesterol exacerbate gastritis through the interaction with C-type lectin receptors. Cholesteryl acyl α-glucoside (αCAG) and cholesteryl phosphatidyl α-glucoside (αCPG) were identified as non-canonical ligands for Mincle (Clec4e) and DCAR (Clec4b1). During chronic infection, H. pylori-specific T cell responses and gastritis were ameliorated in Mincle-deficient mice, although bacterial burdens remained unchanged. Furthermore, a mutant H. pylori strain lacking αCAG and αCPG exhibited an impaired ability to cause gastritis. Thus, H. pylori-specific modification of host cholesterol plays a pathophysiological role that exacerbates gastric inflammation by triggering C-type lectin receptors.