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Chronic hepatitis, hepatic dysplasia, fibrosis, and biliary hyperplasia in hamsters naturally infected with a novel helicobacter classified in the H. bilis cluster

Chronic hepatitis, hepatic dysplasia, fibrosis, and biliary hyperplasia in hamsters naturally infected with a novel helicobacter classified in the H. bilis cluster
Chronic hepatitis, hepatic dysplasia, fibrosis, and biliary hyperplasia in hamsters naturally infected with a novel helicobacter classified in the H. bilis cluster
We recently described helicobacter-associated progressive, proliferative, and dysplastic typhlocolitis in aging (18- to 24-month-old) Syrian hamsters. Other pathogens associated with typhlocolitis in hamsters, Clostridium difficile, Lawsonia intracellularis, and Giardia spp., were not identified. The presence of Helicobacter genus-specific DNA was noted by PCR in cecal and paraffin-embedded liver samples from aged hamsters by the use of Helicobacter-specific PCR primers. By 16S rRNA analysis, the Helicobacter sp. isolated from the liver tissue was identical to the cecal isolates from hamsters. The six hamster 16S rRNA sequences form a genotypic cluster most closely related to Helicobacter sp. Flexispira taxon 8, part of the Helicobacter bilis/H. cinaedi group. Livers from aged helicobacter-infected hamsters showed various stages of predominantly portocentric and, to a lesser extent, perivenular fibrosis. Within nodules, there was cellular atypia consistent with nodular dysplasia. The livers also exhibited a range of chronic active portal/interface and lobular inflammation, with significant portal hepatitis being present. The inflammation was composed of a mixture of lymphocytes, neutrophils, and macrophages, indicative of its chronic-active nature in these aged hamsters infected with Helicobacter spp. The isolation of novel Helicobacter spp., their identification by PCR from the diseased livers of aged hamsters, and their taxonomic classification as belonging to the Helicobacter bilis cluster strengthen the argument that H. bilis and closely related Helicobacter spp. play an etiological role in hepatobiliary disease in both animals and humans.
0095-1137
3673-3681
Fox, J.G.
d99abc88-7b63-498a-9856-b6783302861d
Shen, Z.
ec1bb31c-8895-4755-8f29-2d19ce6ad53e
Muthupalani, S.
b31b27e7-48c5-44e7-b412-4fc1b93b5781
Rogers, A.R.
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7
Kirchain, S.M.
defc0296-2abc-4fc6-b769-edcac29f3df0
Dewhirst, F.E.
3a655828-f506-4d36-8d7f-d29116d5a19e
Fox, J.G.
d99abc88-7b63-498a-9856-b6783302861d
Shen, Z.
ec1bb31c-8895-4755-8f29-2d19ce6ad53e
Muthupalani, S.
b31b27e7-48c5-44e7-b412-4fc1b93b5781
Rogers, A.R.
105eeebc-1899-4850-950e-385a51738eb7
Kirchain, S.M.
defc0296-2abc-4fc6-b769-edcac29f3df0
Dewhirst, F.E.
3a655828-f506-4d36-8d7f-d29116d5a19e

Fox, J.G., Shen, Z., Muthupalani, S., Rogers, A.R., Kirchain, S.M. and Dewhirst, F.E. (2009) Chronic hepatitis, hepatic dysplasia, fibrosis, and biliary hyperplasia in hamsters naturally infected with a novel helicobacter classified in the H. bilis cluster. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 47 (11), 3673-3681. (doi:10.1128/JCM.00879-09). (PMID:19759229)

Record type: Article

Abstract

We recently described helicobacter-associated progressive, proliferative, and dysplastic typhlocolitis in aging (18- to 24-month-old) Syrian hamsters. Other pathogens associated with typhlocolitis in hamsters, Clostridium difficile, Lawsonia intracellularis, and Giardia spp., were not identified. The presence of Helicobacter genus-specific DNA was noted by PCR in cecal and paraffin-embedded liver samples from aged hamsters by the use of Helicobacter-specific PCR primers. By 16S rRNA analysis, the Helicobacter sp. isolated from the liver tissue was identical to the cecal isolates from hamsters. The six hamster 16S rRNA sequences form a genotypic cluster most closely related to Helicobacter sp. Flexispira taxon 8, part of the Helicobacter bilis/H. cinaedi group. Livers from aged helicobacter-infected hamsters showed various stages of predominantly portocentric and, to a lesser extent, perivenular fibrosis. Within nodules, there was cellular atypia consistent with nodular dysplasia. The livers also exhibited a range of chronic active portal/interface and lobular inflammation, with significant portal hepatitis being present. The inflammation was composed of a mixture of lymphocytes, neutrophils, and macrophages, indicative of its chronic-active nature in these aged hamsters infected with Helicobacter spp. The isolation of novel Helicobacter spp., their identification by PCR from the diseased livers of aged hamsters, and their taxonomic classification as belonging to the Helicobacter bilis cluster strengthen the argument that H. bilis and closely related Helicobacter spp. play an etiological role in hepatobiliary disease in both animals and humans.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 16 September 2009
Published date: November 2009
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 366218
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/366218
ISSN: 0095-1137
PURE UUID: ffbbef3e-8afd-4174-a054-36cde54171f4

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Date deposited: 01 Jul 2014 14:17
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 17:05

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Contributors

Author: J.G. Fox
Author: Z. Shen
Author: S. Muthupalani
Author: A.R. Rogers
Author: S.M. Kirchain
Author: F.E. Dewhirst

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