Analysis of the genetic diversity of Helicobacter pylori:: the tale of two genomes

被引:143
|
作者
Alm, RA [1 ]
Trust, TJ [1 ]
机构
[1] AstraZeneca R&D Boston, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE-JMM | 1999年 / 77卷 / 12期
关键词
diversity; helicobacter; genome; gastritis; ulcer;
D O I
10.1007/s001099900067
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Infection with Helicobacter pylori has been linked to numerous severe gastroduodenal diseases including peptic ulcer and gastric cancer. Several techniques have been used to measure the genetic heterogeneity of H. pylori at several different levels and to determine whether there is any correlation with severity of disease. The availability of two completed genome sequences from unrelated strains (J99 and 26695) has allowed an analysis of the level of diversity from a large-scale yet detailed perspective. Although the two chromosomes are organized differently in a limited number of discrete regions, the genome size and gene order of these two ''high-virulence" (cagA(+) and vacA(+)) H. pylori isolates was found to be highly similar. The regions of organizational difference are associated with insertion sequences, DNA restriction/modification genes, repeat sequences, or a combination of the above. A significant level of variation at the nucleotide level is seen across the genome, providing an explanation for why the nucleotide-based typing techniques have such high discriminatory power among independent H. pylori isolates. This nucleotide variation together with the organizational rearrangements appears to have provided an over-estimation of the gene order diversity of H. pylori as assessed by pulse-field gel electrophoresis. Functional assignments are assigned to approximately only 60% of the gene products in each strain, with one-half of the remaining gene products of unknown function having homologues in other bacteria, while the remainder appear to be H. pylori-specific. Between 6% and 7% of the coding capacity of each strain are genes that are absent from the other strain, with almost one-half of these strain-specific genes located in a single hypervariable region called the plasticity zone. The majority of the strain-specific genes in each strain are also H. pylori-specific, with no homologues being identified in the public databases. Significantly, over one-half of the functionally assigned strain-specific genes in both H. pylori J99 and 26695 encode DNA restriction/modification enzymes. Analysis of the level of conservation between orthologues from the two strains indicates that the Ei. pylori specific genes have a lower lever of conservation than those orthologues to which a putative function can be assigned. The plasticity zone represents one of several regions across each genome that is comprised of lower (G+C)% content DNA, some of which has been detected in self-replicating plasmids, suggesting that both horizontal transfer from other species and plasmid integration are responsible for the strain-specific diversity at this locus. These analyses have yielded results with important implications for understanding the genetic diversity of H. pylori and its associated diseases, and imply a need to reassess the respective roles of bacterial and host factors in H. pylori associated diseases.
引用
收藏
页码:834 / 846
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Analysis of the genetic diversity of Helicobacter pylori: the tale of two genomes
    Richard A. Alm
    Trevor J. Trust
    Journal of Molecular Medicine, 1999, 77 : 834 - 846
  • [2] Genetic diversity of Helicobacter pylori
    Logan, RPH
    Berg, DE
    LANCET, 1996, 348 (9040): : 1462 - 1463
  • [3] Genetic diversity in Helicobacter pylori
    Cover, TL
    HELICOBACTER, 1997, 2 (02) : 108 - 109
  • [4] Helicobacter pylori -: a conundrum of genetic diversity
    Marshall, DG
    Dundon, WG
    Beesley, SM
    Smyth, CJ
    MICROBIOLOGY-SGM, 1998, 144 : 2925 - 2939
  • [5] Genetic diversity of Helicobacter pylori strains and their hosts
    Linz, B.
    Bortolini, M. C.
    Sobral, B.
    Dominguez, M.
    HELICOBACTER, 2006, 11 (04) : 325 - 325
  • [6] Genomes of Helicobacter pylori prophages
    Vale, F. F.
    Nunes, A.
    Oleastro, M.
    Gomes, J. P.
    Sampaio, D. A.
    Rocha, R.
    Vitor, J.
    Engstrand, L.
    Pascoe, B.
    Berthenet, E.
    Sheppard, S.
    Hitchings, M. D.
    Megraud, F.
    Vadivedu, J.
    Lehours, P.
    HELICOBACTER, 2016, 21 : 86 - 86
  • [7] A revised annotation and comparative analysis of Helicobacter pylori genomes
    Boneca, IG
    de Reuse, H
    Epinat, JC
    Pupin, M
    Labigne, A
    Moszer, I
    NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2003, 31 (06) : 1704 - 1714
  • [8] Helicobacter pylori genetic diversity and risk of human disease
    Blaser, MJ
    Berg, DE
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION, 2001, 107 (07): : 767 - 773
  • [9] Helicobacter pylori antimicrobial susceptibilities:: A tale of two cities.
    Morton, D
    Ahmed, R
    Ally, R
    Segal
    Bardhan, KD
    GASTROENTEROLOGY, 1998, 114 (04) : A234 - A234
  • [10] A Tale of Two Genomes
    Callier, Viviane
    SCIENTIST, 2019, 33 (11): : 42 - 47