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Evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: Helicobacter pylori East Asian genomes

BACKGROUND: The genome of Helicobacter pylori, an oncogenic bacterium in the human stomach, rapidly evolves and shows wide geographical divergence. The high incidence of stomach cancer in East Asia might be related to bacterial genotype. We used newly developed comparative methods to follow the evol...

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Autores principales: Kawai, Mikihiko, Furuta, Yoshikazu, Yahara, Koji, Tsuru, Takeshi, Oshima, Kenshiro, Handa, Naofumi, Takahashi, Noriko, Yoshida, Masaru, Azuma, Takeshi, Hattori, Masahira, Uchiyama, Ikuo, Kobayashi, Ichizo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3120642/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21575176
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2180-11-104
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author Kawai, Mikihiko
Furuta, Yoshikazu
Yahara, Koji
Tsuru, Takeshi
Oshima, Kenshiro
Handa, Naofumi
Takahashi, Noriko
Yoshida, Masaru
Azuma, Takeshi
Hattori, Masahira
Uchiyama, Ikuo
Kobayashi, Ichizo
author_facet Kawai, Mikihiko
Furuta, Yoshikazu
Yahara, Koji
Tsuru, Takeshi
Oshima, Kenshiro
Handa, Naofumi
Takahashi, Noriko
Yoshida, Masaru
Azuma, Takeshi
Hattori, Masahira
Uchiyama, Ikuo
Kobayashi, Ichizo
author_sort Kawai, Mikihiko
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The genome of Helicobacter pylori, an oncogenic bacterium in the human stomach, rapidly evolves and shows wide geographical divergence. The high incidence of stomach cancer in East Asia might be related to bacterial genotype. We used newly developed comparative methods to follow the evolution of East Asian H. pylori genomes using 20 complete genome sequences from Japanese, Korean, Amerind, European, and West African strains. RESULTS: A phylogenetic tree of concatenated well-defined core genes supported divergence of the East Asian lineage (hspEAsia; Japanese and Korean) from the European lineage ancestor, and then from the Amerind lineage ancestor. Phylogenetic profiling revealed a large difference in the repertoire of outer membrane proteins (including oipA, hopMN, babABC, sabAB and vacA-2) through gene loss, gain, and mutation. All known functions associated with molybdenum, a rare element essential to nearly all organisms that catalyzes two-electron-transfer oxidation-reduction reactions, appeared to be inactivated. Two pathways linking acetyl~CoA and acetate appeared intact in some Japanese strains. Phylogenetic analysis revealed greater divergence between the East Asian (hspEAsia) and the European (hpEurope) genomes in proteins in host interaction, specifically virulence factors (tipα), outer membrane proteins, and lipopolysaccharide synthesis (human Lewis antigen mimicry) enzymes. Divergence was also seen in proteins in electron transfer and translation fidelity (miaA, tilS), a DNA recombinase/exonuclease that recognizes genome identity (addA), and DNA/RNA hybrid nucleases (rnhAB). Positively selected amino acid changes between hspEAsia and hpEurope were mapped to products of cagA, vacA, homC (outer membrane protein), sotB (sugar transport), and a translation fidelity factor (miaA). Large divergence was seen in genes related to antibiotics: frxA (metronidazole resistance), def (peptide deformylase, drug target), and ftsA (actin-like, drug target). CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate dramatic genome evolution within a species, especially in likely host interaction genes. The East Asian strains appear to differ greatly from the European strains in electron transfer and redox reactions. These findings also suggest a model of adaptive evolution through proteome diversification and selection through modulation of translational fidelity. The results define H. pylori East Asian lineages and provide essential information for understanding their pathogenesis and designing drugs and therapies that target them.
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spelling pubmed-31206422011-06-23 Evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: Helicobacter pylori East Asian genomes Kawai, Mikihiko Furuta, Yoshikazu Yahara, Koji Tsuru, Takeshi Oshima, Kenshiro Handa, Naofumi Takahashi, Noriko Yoshida, Masaru Azuma, Takeshi Hattori, Masahira Uchiyama, Ikuo Kobayashi, Ichizo BMC Microbiol Research Article BACKGROUND: The genome of Helicobacter pylori, an oncogenic bacterium in the human stomach, rapidly evolves and shows wide geographical divergence. The high incidence of stomach cancer in East Asia might be related to bacterial genotype. We used newly developed comparative methods to follow the evolution of East Asian H. pylori genomes using 20 complete genome sequences from Japanese, Korean, Amerind, European, and West African strains. RESULTS: A phylogenetic tree of concatenated well-defined core genes supported divergence of the East Asian lineage (hspEAsia; Japanese and Korean) from the European lineage ancestor, and then from the Amerind lineage ancestor. Phylogenetic profiling revealed a large difference in the repertoire of outer membrane proteins (including oipA, hopMN, babABC, sabAB and vacA-2) through gene loss, gain, and mutation. All known functions associated with molybdenum, a rare element essential to nearly all organisms that catalyzes two-electron-transfer oxidation-reduction reactions, appeared to be inactivated. Two pathways linking acetyl~CoA and acetate appeared intact in some Japanese strains. Phylogenetic analysis revealed greater divergence between the East Asian (hspEAsia) and the European (hpEurope) genomes in proteins in host interaction, specifically virulence factors (tipα), outer membrane proteins, and lipopolysaccharide synthesis (human Lewis antigen mimicry) enzymes. Divergence was also seen in proteins in electron transfer and translation fidelity (miaA, tilS), a DNA recombinase/exonuclease that recognizes genome identity (addA), and DNA/RNA hybrid nucleases (rnhAB). Positively selected amino acid changes between hspEAsia and hpEurope were mapped to products of cagA, vacA, homC (outer membrane protein), sotB (sugar transport), and a translation fidelity factor (miaA). Large divergence was seen in genes related to antibiotics: frxA (metronidazole resistance), def (peptide deformylase, drug target), and ftsA (actin-like, drug target). CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate dramatic genome evolution within a species, especially in likely host interaction genes. The East Asian strains appear to differ greatly from the European strains in electron transfer and redox reactions. These findings also suggest a model of adaptive evolution through proteome diversification and selection through modulation of translational fidelity. The results define H. pylori East Asian lineages and provide essential information for understanding their pathogenesis and designing drugs and therapies that target them. BioMed Central 2011-05-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3120642/ /pubmed/21575176 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2180-11-104 Text en Copyright ©2011 Kawai et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kawai, Mikihiko
Furuta, Yoshikazu
Yahara, Koji
Tsuru, Takeshi
Oshima, Kenshiro
Handa, Naofumi
Takahashi, Noriko
Yoshida, Masaru
Azuma, Takeshi
Hattori, Masahira
Uchiyama, Ikuo
Kobayashi, Ichizo
Evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: Helicobacter pylori East Asian genomes
title Evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: Helicobacter pylori East Asian genomes
title_full Evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: Helicobacter pylori East Asian genomes
title_fullStr Evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: Helicobacter pylori East Asian genomes
title_full_unstemmed Evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: Helicobacter pylori East Asian genomes
title_short Evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: Helicobacter pylori East Asian genomes
title_sort evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: helicobacter pylori east asian genomes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3120642/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21575176
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2180-11-104
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