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Mouse study finds stomach ulcer-causing microbes may also affect brain
By Tina Hesman Saey


NEW ORLEANS — Brain cells may be the latest victim of a bacterial bad guy 
already charged with causing ulcers and stomach cancer.

Helicobacter pylori, a bacterium that lives in the stomachs of about half the 
people in the world, may help trigger Parkinson’s disease, researchers 
reported May 22 at a meeting of the American Society for Microbiology. 
Parkinson’s disease is a neurological disorder that kills dopamine-producing 
cells in some parts of the brain. People with the disease have trouble 
controlling their movements. About 60,000 new cases of the disease are 
diagnosed each year in the United States.

Some previous studies have suggested that people with Parkinson’s disease are 
more likely than healthy people to have had ulcers at some point in their 
lives and are more likely to be infected with H. pylori. But until now those 
connections between the bacterium and the disease have amounted to 
circumstantial evidence.

Now researchers are gathering evidence that may pin at least some blame for 
Parkinson’s disease on the notorious bacterium.

Middle-aged mice infected with the ulcer-causing bacterium developed abnormal 
movement patterns over several months of infection, said Traci Testerman, a 
microbiologist at Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in 
Shreveport. Young mice infected with the bacterium didn’t show any signs of 
movement problems. Testerman’s colleague, neuroscientist Michael Salvatore, 
found that Helicobacter-infected mice make less dopamine in parts of the brain 
that control movement, possibly indicating that dopamine-making cells are 
dying just as they do in Parkinson’s disease patients.

The bacteria didn’t have to be alive to cause the problem. Feeding mice killed 
H. pylori produced the same effect, suggesting that some biochemical component 
of the bacterium is responsible.

A candidate for the disease-causing molecule is modified cholesterol. 
Helicobacter can’t make its own cholesterol, so it steals cholesterol from its 
host and then sticks a sugar molecule on it. The structure of the modified 
cholesterol resembles a toxin from a tropical cycad; people in Guam who have 
eaten the plant's seeds have developed a disease called ALS-parkinsonism 
dementia complex. Testerman and her colleagues are trying to determine if the 
modified cholesterol alone can lead to Parkinson-like symptoms in mice or if 
some other factor from the bacterium is also needed.

Even if the scientists show that H. pylori can cause or contribute to 
Parkinson’s disease, it’s not clear whether getting rid of the organism would 
be a good thing. Although the bacterium causes ulcers and stomach cancer, it 
also helps protect against allergies, asthma and esophageal cancer and other 
acid reflux diseases. It is hard to know at this point exactly how letting 
Helicobacter stay or making it go will affect any individual person, said 
microbiologist Stanley Maloy of San Diego State University. But it is clear 
that a possible link between Parkinson’s disease and the stomach bacterium can 
no longer be ignored.

“There’s enough solid data that it would be wrong not to look into it more 
closely,” Maloy said.
http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/74653/title/Suspect_bacterium_may_trigger_Parkinson%E2%80%99s

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