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Effect of Cold Starvation, Acid Stress, and Nutrients on Metabolic Activity of Helicobacter pylori. (2002)

Abstract
Helicobacter pylori can transform, in vivo as well as in vitro, from dividing spiral-shaped forms into nonculturable coccoids, with intermediate forms called U forms. The importance of nonculturable coccoid forms of H. pylori in disease transmission and antibiotic treatment failures is unclear. Metabolic activities of actively growing as well as nonculturable H. pylori were investigated by comparing the concentrations of cellular ATP and total RNA, gene expression, presence of cytoplasmic polyphosphate granules and iron inclusions, and cellular morphology during extended broth culture and nutritional cold starvation. In addition, the effect of exposing broth-cultured or cold-starved cells to a nutrient-rich or acidic environment on the metabolic activities was investigated. ATP was detectable up to 14 days and for at least 25 days after transformation from the spiral form to the coccoid form or U form in broth-cultured and cold-starved cells, respectively. mRNAs of VacA, a 26-kDa protein, and urease A were detected by using reverse transcription-PCR in cells cultured for 2 months in broth or cold starved for at least 28 months. The ATP concentration was not affected during exposure to fresh or acidified broth, while 4- to 12-h exposures of nonculturable cells to lysed human erythrocytes increased cellular ATP 12- to 150-fold. Incubation of nonculturable cold-starved cells with an erythrocyte lysate increased total RNA expression and ureA mRNA transcription as measured by quantitative real-time reverse transcription-PCR. Furthermore, the number of structurally intact starved coccoids containing polyphosphate granules increased almost fourfold (P = 0.0022) under the same conditions. In conclusion, a specific environmental stimulus can induce ATP, polyphosphate, and RNA metabolism in nonculturable H. pylori, indicating viability of such morphological forms.

Publication details
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Repository lu:research (Sweden)
Keywords Medicine (General), Microbiology
Type Journal article

Publications citing this publication (1)
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Cited publications (9)
Temperature-dependent membrane fatty acid and cell physiology changes in coccoid forms of C. jejuni. (1995)
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Immunoglobulin G Antibody Response to Infection with Coccoid Forms of Helicobacter pylori
Coccoid forms of Helicobacter pylori are the morphologic manifestation of cell death.
Paracrystalline inclusions of a novel ferritin containing nonheme iron, produced by the human gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori: evidence for a third class of ferritins.
Use of autoradiography to assess viability of Helicobacter pylori in water.
Growth and morphological transformations of Helicobacter pylori in broth media.
Sensitive detection of Helicobacter pylori by using polymerase chain reaction.