| Literature DB >> 26387443 |
F F Vale1,2,3, J Vadivelu4, M Oleastro5, S Breurec6,7, L Engstrand8, T T Perets9,10, F Mégraud1,2, P Lehours1,2.
Abstract
Prophages of Helicobacter pylori, a bacterium known to co-evolve in the stomach of its human host, were recently identified. However, their role in the diversity of H. pylori strains is unknown. We demonstrate here and for the first time that the diversity of the prophage genes offers the ability to distinguish between European populations, and that H. pylori prophages and their host bacteria share a complex evolutionary history. By comparing the phylogenetic trees of two prophage genes (integrase and holin) and the multilocus sequence typing (MLST)-based data obtained for seven housekeeping genes, we observed that the majority of the strains belong to the same phylogeographic group in both trees. Furthermore, we found that the Bayesian analysis of the population structure of the prophage genes identified two H. pylori European populations, hpNEurope and hpSWEurope, while the MLST sequences identified one European population, hpEurope. The population structure analysis of H. pylori prophages was even more discriminative than the traditional MLST-based method for the European population. Prophages are new players to be considered not only to show the diversity of H. pylori strains but also to more sharply define human populations.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26387443 PMCID: PMC4585682 DOI: 10.1038/srep14333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Neighbour-joining H. pylori MLST population tree of 804 strains.
741 strains from PubMLST (corresponding to initial studies by Falush et al.1 and Linz et al.2) and 63 strains from the present study. (A) The major H. pylori populations (six populations and three sub-populations) were identified according to the assigned population available at PubMLST. (B) Identification and position in the tree of the 41 strains and 22 genomes carrying the prophage integrase and holin genes.
Figure 2Distruct plot of Bayesian population assignments using STRUCTURE 2.3.4. and an admixture model (K = 4) for the 63 strains carrying prophages.
(A) Distruct plot obtained with the prophage gene sequences (PST) and (B) with the sequences of seven housekeeping genes (MLST). Each bacterial isolate is depicted by a thin vertical line, which is divided into K coloured segments representing the membership coefficients in each cluster.
Figure 3(A) Neighbour-joining tree (Kimura 2-parameter) of 63 concatenated prophage sequences from H. pylori strains carrying prophages colour-coded according to the population assigment by STRUCTURE using the prophage genes. (B) Neighbour-joining tree (Kimura 2-parameter) of 63 concatenated sequences obtained after MLST of H. pylori strains carrying prophages, and their attributed population structure after STRUCTURE analysis.