Inhibition of human gastric cyclic AMP production by Helicobacter pylori protein—possible involvement of mucosal prostaglandin E2

Abstract
The effect of Helicobacter pylori protein on cAMP and prostaglandin (PGE2) production was studied in incubates of human gastric fundic mucosa. At 24 hours, specimens incubated in the control fluid had a median cAMP value of 81 pmol/mg protein, compared to 28 pmol/mg (P less than 0.05) when incubated in H. pylori protein, 155 pmol/kg (P less than 0.006) in histamine, and 23 pmol/kg (P less than 0.05) in histamine plus H. pylori protein. A similar trend was observed at 48 hours. Although H. pylori protein had no direct effect on mucosal PGE2, it intensified the inhibitory effect of indomethacin and prevented the stimulatory effect of histamine on both PGE2 and cAMP production. Given the role of cAMP in various physiological responses, these results suggest that H. pylori protein might alter those functional aspects of the human gastric mucosa which rely on cAMP as a second messenger. Assuming that PGE2 is involved in mediating such effect, its role would appear to be either partial or indirect.