Société Linnéenne de LyonSciences naturelles · depuis 1822

Article du Bulletin

Experimental Helicobacter marmotae infection in A/J mice causes enterohepatic disease [Expérimentale infection à Helicobacter marmotae chez la souris A / J causes de la maladie entéro-hépatique].

Patterson M.M., Rogers A.B. & Fox J.G. · 2010 · J. Med. Microbiol. , 59(Pt 10): 1235-1241.

Résumé

Helicobacter marmotae has been identified in the inflamed livers of Eastern woodchucks (Marmota monax) infected with woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV), as well as from the livers of WHV-negative woodchucks. Because the majority of WHV-positive woodchucks with hepatic tumours were culture or PCR positive for this helicobacter, and WHV-negative woodchucks with H. marmotae had hepatitis, the bacterium may have a role in tumour promotion related to chronic inflammation. In this study, the type strain of H. marmotae was inoculated intraperitoneally into 48 male and female A/J mice, a strain noted to be susceptible to Helicobacter hepaticus-induced liver tumours. Sixteen mice served as mock-dosed controls. At 6, 12 and 18 months post-inoculation (p.i.), there were statistically significant (PH. marmotae could be selected to maximize colonization and lesion development. Such a woodchuck helicobacter-infected mouse model could be used to dissect potential mechanisms of microbial co-carcinogenesis involved in tumour development in woodchucks with WHV and in humans with hepatitis B virus.