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Biochemical aspects of H. pylori adhesion.
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1997
Year
Proteinlipid InteractionMicrobial PathogensCell AdhesionMolecular BiologyBacterial PathogensAnimal Gastric PathogensH. PyloriInfection ControlAntimicrobial ResistanceAerobic CulturingHost-pathogen InteractionsMicrobial ToxinBiochemistryVirulence FactorMembrane BiologyPathogen CharacterizationBiochemical AspectsMolecular MicrobiologyGastric Mucus LayerClinical MicrobiologyNatural SciencesPathogenesisMicrobiologyCellular BiochemistryMedicine
In analogy with Vibrio cholerae and other toxigenic enteropathogens such as Yersinia enterocolitica it seems most likely today that H. pylori by specific surface proteins binds to epithelial cell receptors (Table 1) allowing the pathogen to deliver urease, vacuolating toxin and other toxic metabolites to cause tissue damage and inflammation (1-3). H. pylori as well as animal gastric pathogens as H. mustelae and H. felis have developed an efficient flagellar apparatus allowing rapid and efficient penetration of the gastric mucus layer (3). Most interestingly, flagellae seems to be synthesized in the late stage of growth before the switch of spiral-shaped organisms to coccoidal forms in a liquid medium.