Genomic differentiation within East Asian Helicobacter pylori

Author:

You Yuanhai1,Thorell Kaisa23ORCID,He Lihua1,Yahara Koji4,Yamaoka Yoshio5ORCID,Cha Jeong-Heon6ORCID,Murakami Kazunari7ORCID,Katsura Yukako8,Kobayashi Ichizo910111213,Falush Daniel14,Zhang Jianzhong1,

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Infectious Disease Prevention and Control, Collaborative Innovation Center for Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, National Institute for Communicable Disease Control and Prevention, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, PR China

2. Department of Clinical Microbiology, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Västra Götaland 12 Region, Gothenburg, Sweden

3. Department of Infectious Diseases, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden

4. Antimicrobial Resistance Research Center, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan

5. Department of Environmental and Preventive Medicine, Oita University Faculty of Medicine, Oita, Japan

6. Department of Oral Biology, BK21 Plus Project, Yonsei University College of Dentistry, Seoul, Republic of Korea

7. Department of Gastroenterology, Faculty of Medicine, Oita University, Oita, Japan

8. Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University, Inuyama, Japan

9. Department of Computational Biology and Medical Sciences (formerly Department of Medical Genome Sciences), Graduate School of Frontier Sciences, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

10. Department of Infectious Diseases, Kyorin University School of Medicine, Mitaka-shi, Tokyo, Japan

11. I2BC, University of Paris-Saclay, Gif-sur-Yvette, France

12. Research Center for Micro-Nano Technology, Hosei University, Koganei-shi, Tokyo, Japan

13. Institute of Medical Science, University of Tokyo, Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan

14. The Center for Microbes, Development and Health, Key Laboratory of Molecular Virology and Immunology, Institut Pasteur of Shanghai, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, PR China

Abstract

The East Asian region, including China, Japan and Korea, accounts for half of gastric cancer deaths. However, different areas have contrasting gastric cancer incidences and the population structure of Helicobacter pylori in this ethnically diverse region is yet unknown. We aimed to investigate genomic differences in H. pylori between these areas to identify sequence polymorphisms associated with increased cancer risk. We analysed 381  H . pylori genomes collected from different areas of the three countries using phylogenetic and population genetic tools to characterize population differentiation. The functional consequences of SNPs with a highest fixation index (Fst) between subpopulations were examined by mapping amino acid changes on 3D protein structure, solved or modelled. Overall, 329/381 genomes belonged to the previously identified hspEAsia population indicating that import of bacteria from other regions of the world has been uncommon. Seven subregional clusters were found within hspEAsia, related to subpopulations with various ethnicities, geographies and gastric cancer risks. Subpopulation-specific amino acid changes were found in multidrug exporters (hefC), transporters (frpB-4), outer membrane proteins (hopI) and several genes involved in host interaction, such as a catalase site, involved in H2O2 entrance, and a flagellin site mimicking host glycosylation. Several of the top hits, including frpB-4, hefC, alpB/hopB and hofC, have been found to be differentiated within the Americas in previous studies, indicating that a handful of genes may be key to local geographic adaptation. H. pylori within East Asia are not homogeneous but have become differentiated geographically at multiple loci that might have facilitated adaptation to local conditions and hosts. This has important implications for further evaluation of these changes in relation to the varying gastric cancer incidence between geographical areas in this region.

Funder

Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention

National Major Science and Technology Projects of China

Swedish Research Council

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine

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