Journal article
Superoxide dismutase from Helicobacter pylori suppresses the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines during in vivo infection
A Stent, AL Every, YT Chionh, GZ Ng, P Sutton
Helicobacter | WILEY | Published : 2018
DOI: 10.1111/hel.12459
Abstract
Background: Helicobacter pylori has undergone considerable adaptation to allow chronic persistence within the gastric environment. While H. pylori-associated diseases are driven by an excessive inflammation, severe gastritis is detrimental to colonization by this pathogen. Hence, H. pylori has developed strategies to minimize the severity of gastritis it triggers in its host. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) is well known for its role in protecting against oxidative attack; less recognized is its ability to inhibit immunity, shown for SOD from mammalian sources and those of some bacterial species. This study examined whether H. pylori SOD (HpSOD) has the ability to inhibit the host immune response..
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Funding Acknowledgements
Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program; Australian Government Australian Postgraduate Award; National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia