Emergence of recombinant strains ofHelicobacter pyloriduring human infection
Open Access
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Molecular Microbiology
- Vol. 31 (1) , 31-43
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2958.1999.01140.x
Abstract
Genetic recombination can be important evolutionarily in speeding the adaptation of organisms to new environments and in purging deleterious mutations. Here, we describe polymerase chain reaction (PCR), hybridization and DNA sequence‐based evidence of six such exchanges between two strains of Helicobacter pylori during natural mixed infection of a patient in Lithuania. One parent strain contained the 37 kb long, virulence‐associated cag pathogenicity island (PAI), and the other strain lacked this PAI. Most H. pylori from the patient had descended from the cag+ parent, but had become cag− during infection. This had resulted from transfer of DNA containing the ‘empty site’ allele from the cag− strain and homologous recombination, not from excision of the cag PAI without DNA transfer. Other cases of recombination involved genes for an outer membrane protein (omp5 and omp29; also called HP0227 and HP1342) and a putative phosphoenolpyruvate synthase (ppsA ; HP0121). Replacement of a short patch of DNA sequence (36–124 bp) was also seen. As the chance of forming any given recombinant is small, the abundance of recombinants in this patient suggests selection for particular recombinant genotypes during years of chronic infection. We suggest that genetic exchange among unrelated H. pylori strains, as documented here, is important because of the diversity of this gastric pathogen and its human hosts. Certain H. pylori recombinants may grow better in a given host than either parent. The vigour of growth, in turn, could impact on the severity of disease that infection can elicit.Keywords
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