Helicobacter cinaedi is a human-adapted lineage in the Helicobacter cinaedi/canicola/‘magdeburgensis’ complex

Author:

Gotoh Yasuhiro1,Atsuta Yuya2,Taniguchi Takako3,Nishida Ruriko1,Nakamura Keiji1,Ogura Yoshitoshi4,Misawa Naoaki3,Hayashi Tetsuya1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bacteriology, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan

2. Department of Hematology, Tokyo Metropolitan Cancer and Infectious Diseases Center Komagome Hospital, Tokyo, Japan

3. Center for Animal Disease Control, University of Miyazaki, Miyazaki, Japan

4. Division of Microbiology, Department of Infectious Medicine, Kurume University School of Medicine, Kurume, Fukuoka, Japan

Abstract

Helicobacter cinaedi is an enterohepatic Helicobacter that causes bacteremia and other diseases in humans. While H. cinaedi -like strains are isolated from animals, including dog isolates belonging to a recently proposed H. canicola , little is known about the genetic differences between H. cinaedi and these animal isolates. Here, we sequenced 43 H. cinaedi- or H. canicola -like strains isolated from humans, hamsters, rats and dogs and collected 81 genome sequences of H. cinaedi , H. canicola and other enterohepatic Helicobacter strains from public databases. Genomic comparison of these strains identified four distinct clades (clades I–IV) in H. cinaedi/canicola/magderbugensis’ (HCCM) complex. Among these, clade I corresponds to H. cinaedi sensu stricto and represents a human-adapted lineage in the complex. We identified several genomic features unique to clade I. They include the accumulation of antimicrobial resistance-related mutations that reflects the human association of clade I and the larger genome size and the presence of a CRISPR-Cas system and multiple toxin-antitoxin and restriction-modification systems, both of which indicate the contribution of horizontal gene transfer to the evolution of clade I. In addition, nearly all clade I strains but only a few strains belonging to one minor clade contained a highly variable genomic region encoding a type VI secretion system (T6SS), which could play important roles in gut colonization by killing competitors or inhibiting their growth. We also developed a method to systematically search for H. cinaedi sequences in large metagenome data sets based on the results of genome comparison. Using this method, we successfully identified multiple HCCM complex-containing human faecal metagenome samples and obtained the sequence information covering almost the entire genome of each strain. Importantly, all were clade I strains, supporting our conclusion that H. cinaedi sensu stricto is a human-adapted lineage in the HCCM complex.

Funder

Kurozumi Medical Foundation

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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