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Novel 180- and 480-base-pair insertions in African and African-American strains of Helicobacter pylori

Lookup NU author(s): Dr Julian Thomas

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Abstract

Helicobacter pylori is a genetically diverse bacterial species that chronically infects human stomachs and sometimes causes severe gastroduodenal disease. Studies of polymorphic DNA sequences can suggest geographic origins of individual strains. Here, we describe a 180-bp insertion (ins180), which is just after the translation stop of a gene of unknown function, near the promoter of jhp0152-jhp0151 two-component signal transduction genes in strain J99, and absent from this site in strain 26695. This ins180 insertion was found in 9 of 9 Gambian (West African), 9 of 20 (45%) South African, and 9 of 40 (23%) Spanish strains but in only 2 of 20 (10%) North American strains and none of 20 Lithuanian, 20 Indian, and 20 Japanese strains. Four South African isolates that lacked ins180 and that belonged to an unusual outlier group contained a 480-bp insertion at this site (ins480), whereas none of 181 other strains screened contained ins480. In further tests 56% (10 of 18) of strains from African Americans but only 17% (3 of 18) of strains from Caucasian Americans carried ins180 (P < 0.05). Thus, the H. pylori strains of modern African Americans seem to retain traces of African roots, despite the multiple generations since their ancestors were taken from West Africa. Fragmentary ins180-like sequences were found at numerous sites in H. pylori genomes, always between genes. Such sequences might affect regulation of transcription and could facilitate genome rearrangement by homologous recombination. Apparent differences between African-American and Caucasian-American H. pylori gene pools may bear on our understanding of H. pylori transmission and disease outcome.


Publication metadata

Author(s): McNulty SL, Mole BM, Dailidiene D, Segal I, Ally R, Mistry R, Secka O, Adegbola RA, Thomas JE, Lenarcic EM, Peek RM, Berg DE, Forsyth MH

Publication type: Article

Publication status: Published

Journal: Journal of Clinical Microbiology

Year: 2004

Volume: 42

Issue: 12

Pages: 5658-5663

ISSN (print): 0095-1137

ISSN (electronic): 1070-633X

Publisher: American Society for Microbiology

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JCM.42.12.5658-5663.2004

DOI: 10.1128/JCM.42.12.5658-5663.2004


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Funding

Funder referenceFunder name
R01 CA077955NCI NIH HHS
R01 DK063041NIDDK NIH HHS
R15 AI053062NIAID NIH HHS
R29 CA077955NCI NIH HHS
R01 DK058587NIDDK NIH HHS
AI 38166NIAID NIH HHS
AI 53062NIAID NIH HHS
DK 53727NIDDK NIH HHS
DK 63041NIDDK NIH HHS
CA 77955NCI NIH HHS
DK 58587NIDDK NIH HHS

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