<i>Helicobacter pylori</i> CagA protein targets the c-Met receptor and enhances the motogenic response

Y Churin(Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology), Laila Al-Ghoul(Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg), Oliver Kepp(Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology), Thomas F. Meyer(Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology), Walter Birchmeier(Max Delbrück Center), Michael Naumann(Max Planck Society)
The Journal of Cell Biology
April 28, 2003
Cited by 350Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Infection with the human microbial pathogen Helicobacter pylori is assumed to lead to invasive gastric cancer. We find that H. pylori activates the hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor receptor c-Met, which is involved in invasive growth of tumor cells. The H. pylori effector protein CagA intracellularly targets the c-Met receptor and promotes cellular processes leading to a forceful motogenic response. CagA could represent a bacterial adaptor protein that associates with phospholipase Cgamma but not Grb2-associated binder 1 or growth factor receptor-bound protein 2. The H. pylori-induced motogenic response is suppressed and blocked by the inhibition of PLCgamma and of MAPK, respectively. Thus, upon translocation, CagA modulates cellular functions by deregulating c-Met receptor signaling. The activation of the motogenic response in H. pylori-infected epithelial cells suggests that CagA could be involved in tumor progression.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis