| Literature DB >> 26744403 |
Frank Maixner1, Ben Krause-Kyora2, Dmitrij Turaev3, Alexander Herbig4,5, Michael R Hoopmann6, Janice L Hallows6, Ulrike Kusebauch6, Eduard Egarter Vigl7, Peter Malfertheiner8, Francis Megraud9, Niall O'Sullivan1, Giovanna Cipollini1, Valentina Coia1, Marco Samadelli1, Lars Engstrand10, Bodo Linz11, Robert L Moritz6, Rudolf Grimm12, Johannes Krause4,5, Almut Nebel2, Yoshan Moodley13,14, Thomas Rattei3, Albert Zink1.
Abstract
The stomach bacterium Helicobacter pylori is one of the most prevalent human pathogens. It has dispersed globally with its human host, resulting in a distinct phylogeographic pattern that can be used to reconstruct both recent and ancient human migrations. The extant European population of H. pylori is known to be a hybrid between Asian and African bacteria, but there exist different hypotheses about when and where the hybridization took place, reflecting the complex demographic history of Europeans. Here, we present a 5300-year-old H. pylori genome from a European Copper Age glacier mummy. The "Iceman" H. pylori is a nearly pure representative of the bacterial population of Asian origin that existed in Europe before hybridization, suggesting that the African population arrived in Europe within the past few thousand years.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26744403 PMCID: PMC4775254 DOI: 10.1126/science.aad2545
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728