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A novel taxon selection method, aimed at minimizing recombination, clarifies the discovery of a new sub‐population of Helicobacter pylori from Australia

We present a novel method for taxon selection, the aim being to minimize problems arising from highly recombinant species such as Helicobacter pylori. Helicobacter pylori has accompanied modern‐human migration out of Africa and is marked by a phylogeographic strain distribution, which has been explo...

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Autores principales: Lamichhane, Binit, Wise, Michael J., Chua, Eng Guan, Marshall, Barry J., Tay, Chin Yen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6976958/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31993076
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12864
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author Lamichhane, Binit
Wise, Michael J.
Chua, Eng Guan
Marshall, Barry J.
Tay, Chin Yen
author_facet Lamichhane, Binit
Wise, Michael J.
Chua, Eng Guan
Marshall, Barry J.
Tay, Chin Yen
author_sort Lamichhane, Binit
collection PubMed
description We present a novel method for taxon selection, the aim being to minimize problems arising from highly recombinant species such as Helicobacter pylori. Helicobacter pylori has accompanied modern‐human migration out of Africa and is marked by a phylogeographic strain distribution, which has been exploited to add an extra layer of information about human migrations to that obtained from human sources. However, H. pylori's genome has high sequence heterogeneity combined with a very high rate of recombination, causing major allelic diversification across strains. On the other hand, recombination events that have become preserved in sub‐populations are a useful source of phylogenetic information. This creates a potential problem in selecting representative strains for particular genetic or phylogeographic clusters and generally ameliorating the impact on analyses of extensive low‐level recombination. To address this issue, we perform multiple population structure‐based analyses on core genomes to select exemplar strains, called ‘quintessents’, which exhibit limited recombination. In essence, quintessent strains are representative of their specific phylogenetic clades and can be used to refine the current MLST concatenation‐based population structure classification system. The use of quintessents reduces the noise due to local recombination events, while preserving recombination events that have become fixed in sub‐populations. We illustrate the method with an analysis of core genome concatenations from 185 H. pylori strains, which reveals a recent speciation event resulting from the recombination of strains from phylogeographic clade hpSahul, carried by Aboriginal Australians, and hpEurope, carried by some of the people who arrived in Australia over the past 200 years. The signal is much clearer when based on quintessent strains, but absent from the analysis based on MLST concatenations.
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spelling pubmed-69769582020-01-28 A novel taxon selection method, aimed at minimizing recombination, clarifies the discovery of a new sub‐population of Helicobacter pylori from Australia Lamichhane, Binit Wise, Michael J. Chua, Eng Guan Marshall, Barry J. Tay, Chin Yen Evol Appl Original Articles We present a novel method for taxon selection, the aim being to minimize problems arising from highly recombinant species such as Helicobacter pylori. Helicobacter pylori has accompanied modern‐human migration out of Africa and is marked by a phylogeographic strain distribution, which has been exploited to add an extra layer of information about human migrations to that obtained from human sources. However, H. pylori's genome has high sequence heterogeneity combined with a very high rate of recombination, causing major allelic diversification across strains. On the other hand, recombination events that have become preserved in sub‐populations are a useful source of phylogenetic information. This creates a potential problem in selecting representative strains for particular genetic or phylogeographic clusters and generally ameliorating the impact on analyses of extensive low‐level recombination. To address this issue, we perform multiple population structure‐based analyses on core genomes to select exemplar strains, called ‘quintessents’, which exhibit limited recombination. In essence, quintessent strains are representative of their specific phylogenetic clades and can be used to refine the current MLST concatenation‐based population structure classification system. The use of quintessents reduces the noise due to local recombination events, while preserving recombination events that have become fixed in sub‐populations. We illustrate the method with an analysis of core genome concatenations from 185 H. pylori strains, which reveals a recent speciation event resulting from the recombination of strains from phylogeographic clade hpSahul, carried by Aboriginal Australians, and hpEurope, carried by some of the people who arrived in Australia over the past 200 years. The signal is much clearer when based on quintessent strains, but absent from the analysis based on MLST concatenations. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-09-18 /pmc/articles/PMC6976958/ /pubmed/31993076 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12864 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Lamichhane, Binit
Wise, Michael J.
Chua, Eng Guan
Marshall, Barry J.
Tay, Chin Yen
A novel taxon selection method, aimed at minimizing recombination, clarifies the discovery of a new sub‐population of Helicobacter pylori from Australia
title A novel taxon selection method, aimed at minimizing recombination, clarifies the discovery of a new sub‐population of Helicobacter pylori from Australia
title_full A novel taxon selection method, aimed at minimizing recombination, clarifies the discovery of a new sub‐population of Helicobacter pylori from Australia
title_fullStr A novel taxon selection method, aimed at minimizing recombination, clarifies the discovery of a new sub‐population of Helicobacter pylori from Australia
title_full_unstemmed A novel taxon selection method, aimed at minimizing recombination, clarifies the discovery of a new sub‐population of Helicobacter pylori from Australia
title_short A novel taxon selection method, aimed at minimizing recombination, clarifies the discovery of a new sub‐population of Helicobacter pylori from Australia
title_sort novel taxon selection method, aimed at minimizing recombination, clarifies the discovery of a new sub‐population of helicobacter pylori from australia
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6976958/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31993076
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12864
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