miR-30c Increases the Intracellular Survival of Helicobacter pylori by Inhibiting Autophagy

Deng, Qiuhua and Xu, Yifei and Zhong, Yuanzun and Tang, Liyao and Du, Si and Yang, Jiongming and Wu, Lingping and Guo, Shaoju and Huang, Bin and Cao, Hongying and Huang, Ping and Ahmed, Shiek (2022) miR-30c Increases the Intracellular Survival of Helicobacter pylori by Inhibiting Autophagy. Cellular Microbiology, 2022. pp. 1-12. ISSN 1462-5814

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Abstract

Persistent Helicobacter pylori infection causes a variety of gastrointestinal diseases and even gastric cancer. H. pylori invades gastric epithelial cells to survive and proliferate, which is one of the key factors in persistent colonization. A Published study has confirmed that cells can eliminate intracellular H. pylori through xenophagy to maintain intracellular balance. However, a growing body of evidences indicate that H. pylori can inhibit xenophagy by miRNA through regulating the expression of key autophagy-related genes. Through western blot analysis, mRFP-GFP-LC3 transfection assay, and transmission electron microscopy, we found that H. pylori infection obstructed autophagy flux degradation stage in GES-1 cell lines. Gentamicin protection assay confirmed that inhibit xenophagy is benefit for intracellular H. pylori survive. miR-30c-1-3p and miR-30c-5p were upregulated in GES-1 cell lines after infecting with H. pylori, resulting in the negative regulation on xenophagy. Further studies through bioinformatics analysis and dual-luciferase reporter assays confirmed that ATG14 and ULK1 were the target genes of miR-30c-1-3p and that ATG12 was the target gene of miR-30c-5p. The overexpression of miR-30c-1-3p and miR-30c-5p reduces the expression of ATG14, ULK1, and ATG12 at mRNA level and also decreased intracellular H. pylori elimination in GES-1 cells. The above results suggested that the inhibition on xenophagy by miR-30c-1-3p and miR-30c-5p through ATG14, ULK1, and ATG12 targeting benefitted intracellular H. pylori in the evasion of xenophagy clearance.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Library > Biological Science
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 05 Jan 2023 06:47
Last Modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:42
URI: http://open.journal4submit.com/id/eprint/400

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