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Infection and Immunity, November 1999, p. 6206-6209, Vol. 67, No. 11
0019-9567/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Urease-Based Mucosal Immunization against
Helicobacter heilmannii Infection Induces Corpus Atrophy
in Mice
Christine
Dieterich,1
Hanifa
Bouzourène,2
André L.
Blum,1 and
Irène E.
Corthésy-Theulaz1,*
Division of Gastroenterology, Centre
Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois,1
and Pathology Institute, Lausanne
University,2 Lausanne, Switzerland
Received 22 July 1999/Accepted 24 August 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
Mucosal immunization with Helicobacter heilmannii
urease B or Helicobacter pylori urease, given nasally with
cholera toxin, protects BALB/c mice against H. heilmannii
infection and significantly reduces a preexisting infection. However,
immunization aggravates gastric corpus atrophy. Our results underline
the necessity of defining immunization regimens that do not enhance
mucosal damage.
 |
TEXT |
Helicobacter heilmannii
(previously known as Gastrospirillum hominis) infects the
human gastric mucosa. The infection can lead to chronic active
gastritis (16, 17), gastric erosions (1, 3, 8,
15), and cancers (25, 31). Several lines of evidence
suggest an animal-to-human transmission of H. heilmannii; human and cat strains share morphological and genomic similarities (9, 16), and most infected people have had contact with
domestic animals (20, 29).
Urease is a highly conserved protein among the gastric
Helicobacter species and was successfully used to vaccinate
different animals against Helicobacter pylori (18,
19) or Helicobacter felis (6, 14, 21)
infections. Our aims were to determine whether mucosal immunization
with recombinant H. heilmannii urease B can prevent or cure
H. heilmannii infection and to compare the efficies of
H. pylori and H. heilmannii ureases as immunogens.
Recombinant H. heilmannii urease B.
The gene
encoding the B subunit of H. heilmannii urease
(ureB) was amplified from DNA extracted from a gastric
biopsy of an H. heilmannii-infected cat. Primers flanked
with unique restriction sites and corresponding to positions 930 to 946 and 2636 to 2619 (EMBL L25079) (28) were used for
amplification. The amplified fragment was cloned into pQE9 (Qiagen AG,
Basel, Switzerland), and the recombinant protein was expressed in
Escherichia coli and purified on nickel nitrilotriacetic
acid-agarose as previously described (6, 14, 21). Upon
analysis on a Coomassie blue-stained sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gel (12% polyacrylamide),
the resulting urease B protein (H. heilmannii UreB)
displayed an apparent molecular mass of 62 kDa, similar to that of
H. pylori urease B (Fig. 1).

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FIG. 1.
Analysis of purified recombinant H. heilmannii urease B subunit by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Lanes: 1, molecular mass
markers (15 µl of the 10-kDa protein ladder [Gibco, BRL]); 2, H. heilmannii urease B (5 µg); 3, H. pylori
urease (5 µg).
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Immunization and gastric tissue analysis.
BALB/c mice were
nasally immunized four times weekly under light anesthesia with
H. heilmannii UreB or H. pylori urease (UreAB; kindly provided by OraVax Ltd., Cambridge, Mass.) together with 5 µg
of cholera toxin (CT; Calbiochem, La Jolla, Calif.). Control mice were
immunized with 5 µg of CT. Twenty days after the last immunization or
before the first immunization, mice were orally infected once with
gastric tissue from H. heilmannii-infected mice. Groups of
mice immunized similarly were infected intragastrically with 5 × 107 H. felis cells for validation and
comparison. One month later, animals were killed by cervical
dislocation. One-half of the stomach was used for a semiquantitative
urease test (UT), as previously described (6, 14, 21). The
other half of the stomach was fixed in neutral buffered 10% formalin
and routinely processed for histology. Five-micrometer-thick sections
were stained with hematoxylin and eosin and cresyl violet. Mice were
considered protected or cured from Helicobacter infection
when both UT and histological analysis were negative. All slides were
evaluated by a pathologist blinded to the study code.
Prophylactic immunization.
One hundred percent (9 of 9) of the
CT-immunized animals were infected by H. heilmannii, as
reflected by high numbers of bacteria (median no./10 crypts = 65;
range, 15 to 100 [Fig. 2]). In
contrast, 80% (8 of 10) of the mice immunized with 30 µg of H. heilmannii UreB were protected from H. heilmannii
infection. Similar results were obtained when the immunogen was 30 µg
of H. pylori UreAB: 90% (9 of 10) of the animals were
protected from H. heilmannii infection. Immunization with
H. heilmannii UreB also prevented H. felis
infection in 80% (8 of 10) of the animals (Fig. 2).

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FIG. 2.
Assessment of Helicobacter colonization in
prophylactically immunized mice. The mean number of
Helicobacter cells counted in 10 gastric crypts on three
different slides was determined for each mouse. Mice were considered
protected when both the histology and the UT (data not shown) were
negative. Mice with a positive UT are represented by grey symbols.
Statistical analysis was performed with Fisher's exact test versus the
CT-immunized group. Hh, H. heilmannii; Hp, H. pylori.
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Taken together, these data demonstrate that
H. heilmannii
infection can be prevented by both
H. heilmannii UreB and
H. pylori UreAB, confirming that protective immunity against
Helicobacter infections can be elicited by homologous, as
well as heterologous,
Helicobacter urease or subunits
thereof (
21).
Therapeutic immunization.
To determine whether nasal
immunization with H. pylori UreAB could treat H. heilmannii infection, H. heilmannii-infected mice were
immunized with 30 or 100 µg of H. pylori UreAB plus 5 µg of CT in two independent experiments. CT-immunized mice remained colonized by large numbers of H. heilmannii bacteria located
deep in the gastric pit. Median numbers of 55 (range, 35 to 120) and 100 (range, 20 to 120) per 10 crypts were observed, respectively. None
of the H. pylori UreAB-immunized mice cleared the infection, but a three- to fourfold reduction of the bacterial burden was recorded
(Fig. 3). Similar observations have been
reported when Helicobacter mustelae-infected ferrets
(7), H. pylori-infected monkeys (11),
and H. pylori-infected humans (22) were mucosally immunized with urease. It has to be noted, though, that mucosal delivery of 100 µg of H. pylori UreAB given to a group of
H. felis-infected mice (in parallel to H. heilmannii-infected mice) led to cure of the H. felis
infection in 50% (4 of 8) of the animals (Fig. 3). The use of H. heilmannii recombinant UreB plus CT did not improve the
therapeutic capacity of the immunization regimen (data not shown).
These results indicate that the treatment of H. heilmannii infection is more difficult to achieve than the treatment of
H. felis or H. pylori infection in the
murine model (6).

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FIG. 3.
Assessment of Helicobacter colonization in
therapeutically immunized mice. The presence of Helicobacter
in gastric tissues was assessed as in Fig. 2. The dose of immunogen is
expressed in micrograms and indicated in parentheses. Statistical
analysis was performed with the Wilcoxon-Kruskall-Wallis rank sum test
versus the CT-immunized group. An asterisk denotes that two of the mice
infected with H. felis and immunized with CT had a positive
UT but were not analyzed by histology. Hp, H. pylori.
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Histological analysis of the gastric mucosa.
As depicted in
Fig. 4A and
5A, H. heilmannii infection
elicited, in CT-immunized animals, a mild infiltration of
polymorphonuclear cells and lymphocytes in the antrum (grade 1), a
moderate to severe infiltration in the corpus (grades 2 and 3), and a
mild corpus atrophy in 4 of 9 animals. Unimmunized mice responded like
CT-immunized animals upon challenge (data not shown). When H. heilmannii UreB or H. pylori UreAB was added to the
prophylactic immunization regimen, the degree of inflammation observed
in the antrum or the corpus of immunized mice was not significantly
different from that of CT-immunized animals, but corpus atrophy was
severely aggravated in 70% (7 of 10) of the H. heilmannii
UreB-immunized animals (Wilcoxon-Kruskall-Wallis rank sum test;
P = 0.0005) (Fig. 5B) and in 100% (10/10) of the
H. pylori UreAB-immunized animals (Wilcoxon-Kruskall-Wallis
rank sum test; P = 0.0001).

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FIG. 4.
Histopathological changes in the gastric mucosa of
prophylactically (A) and therapeutically (B) immunized mice challenged
or infected with H. heilmannii. Mice were immunized with 30 µg of H. heilmannii (Hh) UreB or H. pylori (Hp)
UreAB together with 5 µg of CT or with 5 µg of CT alone. The degree
of inflammation was defined as the absence (grade 0) or the presence
(grade 1, mild; grade 2, moderate; grade 3, severe) of
polymorphonuclear and lymphocytic cells in the antrum or the corpus of
the gastric mucosa. Corpus atrophy was characterized by the loss of
parietal cells and a decrease in the mucosal thickness and graded
according to the extent of atrophic surface: grade 1, less than 30%;
grade 2, 30 to 60%; grade 3, more than 60%.
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FIG. 5.
Histological analysis of the corpus mucosa of immunized
mice subsequently infected with H. heilmannii on
hematoxylin-and-eosin-stained sections. (A) Moderate inflammation in
CT-immunized mice. (B) Chronic inflammation in H. heilmannii
UreB-immunized mice with severe atrophy.
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Therapeutically CT-immunized mice (Fig.
4B) displayed the same level of
antral and corpus inflammation as prophylactically
immunized mice, but
had less pronounced corpus atrophy (Wilcoxon-Kruskall-Wallis
rank sum
test;
P = 0.035). This atrophy was significantly
increased
upon
H. pylori UreAB immunization
(Wilcoxon-Kruskall-Wallis rank
sum test;
P = 0.02), but
was not as severe as the one observed
in mice prophylactically
immunized with
H. pylori UreAB (Wilcoxon-Kruskall-Wallis
rank sum test;
P = 0.0002). Similar to what was
observed in the
prophylactic setting, the inflammation present in the
antrum and
corpus of therapeutically
H. pylori
UreAB-immunized mice was not
significantly different from that of
CT-immunized
animals.
Aggravation of inflammation status has been documented in
prophylactically immunized mice challenged with
H. felis
(
14,
21,
26) and has been described as infiltration of
immune cells,
in particular polymorphonuclear cells and lymphocytes
(
6).
It has been correlated with the presence of residual
bacteria
and has been shown to partially resolve upon antibiotic
treatment
(
12). In the case of
H. heilmannii-infected mice, the inflammation
status is not
significantly aggravated by immunization, but corpus
atrophy
is.
The protective immune mechanisms triggered by mucosal immunization are
not fully elucidated. Recent data suggest that protection
of mice
against
Helicobacter infection by immunization with urease
is dependent on major histocompatibility complex class II-restricted,
cell-mediated mechanisms and that antibody responses are not required
(
13). Immunization activates both Th1 and Th2
Helicobacter-specific
responses (
23,
27), and it
has been hypothesized that these
T helper cell responses may be
responsible for enhanced gastric
inflammation (Th1) and reduced
bacterial colonization (Th2) (
24).
Besides T-cell
infiltration, we and others have observed a significant
recruitment of
neutrophils and macrophages in immunized mice (
13).
One
could speculate that these cells once recruited and activated
might
produce cytokines, nitric oxide, and oxy-radicals and enhance
mucosal
damage (
2,
30). Alternatively, immunization might
potentiate
the autoimmune reactions that can occur upon bacterial
infection
(
4,
5,
10). These reactions might depend on
the
Helicobacter species, since urease-immunized animals
that
are challenged or infected with
H. felis do
not develop corpus
atrophy (data not
shown).
In summary, the present study shows that nasal immunization with
recombinant homologous or heterologous urease prevents
H. heilmannii infection in mice and reduces the bacterial load of
a
preexisting infection. These results confirm the value of urease
as a
vaccine antigen for the induction of cross-reactive immune
responses
against different
Helicobacter species. However, an
issue
that is very important in
Helicobacter vaccine development
is being raised: immunized challenged mice and, to a lesser extent,
therapeutically immunized animals develop corpus atrophy. Despite
recent encouraging results in humans with immunization against
H. pylori (
22), this observation should prompt caution and
underlines
the importance of understanding immune and inflammatory
responses
in the gastric mucosa. This knowledge will be required for
defining
immunization regimens and/or antigens containing T epitopes
able
to elicit the appropriate protective or curative immune response
without enhancing the
inflammation.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
This work was supported by the Swiss National Foundation (grants
31.46858.96 and 31-53771.98 to I.C.T. and 31.43240.95 to A.B.).
We thank P. Michetti and L. Hathaway for critical reading of the
manuscript and N. Porta and D. Bachmann for assistance.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding
author. Mailing address: Division of Gastroenterology, Department of
Internal Medicine, CHUV-BH19N.624, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Phone: 41 21 314 06 85. Fax: 41 21 314 06 84. E-mail:
Irene.Corthesy{at}CHUV.hospvd.CH.
Editor:
D. L. Burns
 |
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Infection and Immunity, November 1999, p. 6206-6209, Vol. 67, No. 11
0019-9567/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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